Friday, 29 October 2010

LAST OF THE LIGHT


clox bak
Don't forget.

Make the most of the last days of evening light - have a good weekend.

Thursday, 28 October 2010

YOUR MOVE


chessboard
Let battle commence.

There's been a bit of a chess phase going on in our house recently - maybe because the (k)nights are closing in again...

Monday, 25 October 2010

RIP



The Cool Ruler.

SUNNY AUTUMN SUNDAY



Nice little wave.



Keepin busy.



Into the blue.

Saturday, 23 October 2010

GOODBADUGLY


goodbadugly
SOgood,SObad,SOugly.

When it all comes together - the cast, the location, the direction, the editing and, of-course, the music...

And a great poster (spotted over at Lance Dawes blog).

Thursday, 21 October 2010

ACOUSTIC OR ELECTRIC ?



Acoustic.



Electric.

Wednesday, 20 October 2010

IS THIS...


austerity
If so, does that mean we have just had the age of opulence?

I guess there's no love without hate, no highs without the lows, so maybe it's a yin yang thing.

And, according to my sources (Wikipedia basically). Yin yang is used to describe how polar or seemingly contrary forces are interconnected and interdependent in the natural world, and how they give rise to each other in turn. Yin yang constantly interacts, never existing in absolutes. Yin and yang transform each other: like tides in the ocean, every advance is complemented by a retreat, and every rise transforms into a fall.

But importantly, Taoist philosophy generally discounts good/bad distinctions as superficial labels, preferring to focus on the idea of balance.

Ok, I understand the situation we find ourselves in isn't a natural occurence, it's a direct result of uncontrolled greed and can obviously be defined as bad. And I certainly don't side with the Torys and I loathe all political spin. But more redundancies are inevitable, so rather than freaking out about it (my first instinct) I'm hoping that austerity doesn't throw the flow out too much for those of us who are just doing our best and trying to keep life balanced.

Good luck out there people, keep the faith.

Tuesday, 19 October 2010

CONSISTENT



Chris Jones Newquay 1967. Borrowed from Vintage Surfboard Collector UK.

I'm all over the place; one day it's jumpers, the next it's fantasy-surfing under Mt Fuji, a while ago it was a shell nailed to a tree, I've even blogged about a tractor... Whole lotta random stuff goin' on.

But this guy knows how to keep on track. At Vintage Surfboard Collector UK, Alasdair consistently manages to stay true to his manifesto of posting about British surf history - I find that impressive. (Meanwhile, I was considering doing yet another post about Marvin Gaye tonight...)

Keep up the good work blogger!

Monday, 18 October 2010

THEGREATWAVE

This is a graphic I made a few years ago and sent to my friend Phil who lives in Tokyo. I'd love to go over there and visit him one day and share some waves with Mt Fuji in the background.


Friday, 15 October 2010

WHERE'S ME JUMPER?

It's the time of year when I start thinking I need a new jumper.










The Sultans of Ping FC
'Dancing in the disco, bumper to bumper,
Wait a minute, where's me jumper?'

Monday, 11 October 2010

PIXELS FROM THE PAST

A few more from the old hard drive archive...






Sunday, 10 October 2010

Thursday, 7 October 2010

AUTUMN



... has arrived!



Early morning dog walk.

Thursday, 23 September 2010

HUH?!



Shelly.

It's the flag of Kernow, painted on a seashell, nailed to a tree, along a quiet country lane. Seemingly random, yet somehow significant...

Thursday, 26 August 2010

INTERVIEW - TOM KAY


Tom Kay Finisterre
Tom Kay.

Tom Kay is the founder and MD of Finisterre, an award winning ethical outdoor clothing company. Rapidly gaining recognition for creating innovative fabric technologies and cutting edge design along with transparent environmental stewardship. Based on the cliffs of St. Agnes, Cornwall, managing to combine hard work with a passion for his products whilst still writing the twice weekly Finisterre surf forecast and getting in the sea. I thought I'd try and get a bit of insight into what makes Tom tick...

How and when did you first start surfing?

I actually started surfing when I was about 16, but before that had massively been into windsurfing and I’ve always sailed.

Do you remember your first green wave?

Absolutely. I kind of took off and half swung down the face – just managing not to fall off – and then there was this wall of water extending away from me. I was probably only up for a few seconds, but it felt likes ages.

Is it possible to say what it is about surfing that so inspired you?

I’ve always done things on/around the sea and so it fitted into everything that I was familiar with in that environment. It also came at a time in my life where I was pretty hungry just to be in all the time and as we all know just out the back is often the best place there is.

What kind of board do you ride?

All sorts – I try and get in whenever I can (whatever it’s like) and conditions here are not always epic, so you have to get the right board for the day. With this in mind I ride a mix of everything from longboards, quads etc. A good friend of mine, Neil Erskine, has re-affirmed this philosophy to me many times.

Carlos Burle
Carlos Burle, Finisterre Ambassador at G Spot, Ireland.

Tuesday, 24 August 2010

GUD 1


8.6 diamond tail
The Slide Projector.

I fuggin love this board! Spent ages working out the shape, dims etc... Got Jolly Roger to shape it up and now almost a year later I'm even happier with it than ever. It's proving to be just spot on for the waves I ride and the way I ride em.

D caught a few on it the other day and also gave it the big thumbs up (always cool to get some peer approval).

Monday, 23 August 2010

WHAT IS SURFING?



Surfing is pointless - that is the point...

Strip away the physical endeavour, the encounter with the elements, the enjoyment of nature, the beauty of the sea and the challenge to self. What are you left with? Ultimately it is the act of trying to ride a wave whilst balanced on a reinforced flotation device with no other purpose than that. A beautifully pointless and selfish pastime, which has always been part of its great appeal to me.

Poignantly, the single, most important aspect of surfing is also elusive. Waves appear, then disappear. For ever. And to add to the mystique; each wave is unique, a one-off, never to be repeated. Ever. Climb a mountain and it's still there, you can climb it again. Others can do the same. A wave comes, a wave goes. No one will ever ride that wave again. It remains only in your head. Yes, in this age of digital documentation, there may be images, but no one else can ever actually experience it again. It's yours alone.

As surfing becomes more popular, more accessible and more mainstream. As the surf industry tries to contain, package and quantify it I relish the underlying irony that at its heart surfing will forever remain pointless - just someone trying to stand up on a wave for a few seconds.

Painting by Andrew Garner

Friday, 20 August 2010

FINLESS



Derek Hynd - all over it.

This clip has been around a while, but I just wanted to post it up again here cuz it's mental, original, different.

Monday, 16 August 2010

HELLBILLY

HELLBILLY - an intriguing mashup of off-beat travel and vintage bike & car documentation.

carrier


auto type


watching


shed





ducati


Good work Gav.

Thursday, 12 August 2010

TOG GO BOG E


takeitsoftly
Take it easy.

The Irish equivalent of 'No worries' - sometimes also literally translated as 'Take it softly'. A very cool phrase I think.

T-shirt from the Peoples Republic of Cork - Thanks Daragh.

Monday, 9 August 2010

BOVINE BEACH


cows on beach
Moo.

A simple beach scene, but a closer look reveals a herd of young bovine beach-goers cooling off in the afternoon heat at the weekend.
(Low-quality phone pic.)

Wednesday, 4 August 2010

DREAMERS


willywonka
Gene Wilder, deviantly perfect as Willy Wonka.

In the 1971 movie Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory, Wonka states that "The snozberries taste like snozberries", Veruca Salt responds in an arrogant tone, "Snozberries? Who ever heard of a snozberry?". Willy Wonka grabs her by the mouth and replies, "We are the music makers, and we are the dreamers of dreams."

I've always loved this quote and (shamefully) only recently discovered that they are the first two lines of Ode, part of a poem by Arthur O'Shaughnessy. Here's the first verse:

We are the music makers,
And we are the dreamers of dreams,
Wandering by lone sea-breakers,
And sitting by desolate streams;
World-losers and world-forsakers,
On whom the pale moon gleams:
Yet we are the movers and shakers
Of the world for ever, it seems.

Arthur O'Shaughnessy - 1874

Tuesday, 3 August 2010

PIXELS

A few from the pixel archive.

swim
Swim.


wetchairs
Chairs.


smalldog
Dog.


beachuts
Huts.


seating
Seats.


shoes
Shoes.


joy of sox
Sox.


sundown
Sundowner.

Wednesday, 28 July 2010

I SURF, BUT I'M NOT A SURFER


skr4life
All hail skateboarding.


I have a confession; I've hardly been skateboarding at all lately.

Any free time I get nowadays I try to spend at the beach catching waves, rather than grinding at the local bowl. And the balance has inevitably been tipping that way for the last 10 years or so. But after reading a great post by foulweather recently I had an epiphany...

For me, skateboarding is the source. Discovering skateboarding was a defining point in my life. From that day on I slowly but steadily became a skateboarder.

Of-course, I understand that skateboarding originally evolved from surfing and not the other way around, but personally, it was the skateboard that set me free, that enabled flight, that taught me lessons, that challenged me to push myself and rewarded my efforts.

Sure, growing up in Kernow I knew about surfing and had even dabbled a bit, but it was the skateboard that truly and wholly captured my imagination. And it was skateboarding that provided me with a sense of identity and a set of life-long friends. Funnily enough many of those same friends are now very good at surfing and we still share the stoke, albeit in the water these days.

Skateboarding informed many of my life choices too. When I decided to relocate to a city I chose one with a healthy skate scene. My career path veered into the skateboard industry for a while. The people I gravitated toward and even the bands I listened to were often influenced by skate culture. I wasn't intolerant of other influences and I've always been interested in other realms of music, art & culture. But my roots, if you like, are very firmly embedded in skateboarding.

So despite being a committed non-conformist with a reluctance to join anybody else's club or be stereotyped. I have to admit that there is one label I'd be happy to accept - the one that says "I'm a skater - (who also surfs)".

Tuesday, 27 July 2010

SLEEVED


sleeve
Sleeveface.

MISTY SUN


missedit
Last night the sun had a fight with the mist.

Monday, 26 July 2010

COLOUR BLIND


colour chart
Here's a colour blind chart I made earlier (probably not very useful - see below).

I'm actually a little bit colour blind. I've had to finally accept, after years of frustrating and often bewildering debates, that yes I was probably wrong all the time and that I have colour confusion in the blue/green realm.

Friday, 23 July 2010

(ADJ-NOUN) ANIMALS

Band names made up from an Adjective plus an Animal Name (in that sequence). I'm sure there are many more, plus those constructed the other way around such as Wolfmother etc, but these are a few I like.

sparklehorse
Sparklehorse (RIP Mark Linkous).


arcticmokeys
Arctic Monkeys.


fleetfoxes
Fleet Foxes.


howlinwolf
Howlin Wolf.


longpigs
Longpigs.


yardbirds
Yardbirds (like the typography).


modestmouse
Modest Mouse.