Skate and Annoy: Daily
You cannot kill what already has no life
Proving that you can geek out on skateboards in an entirely different way, Clint Rutka is documenting his process of building another one of those one wheeled skateboard Segways, or Nerdway, as we like to call them here. I don’t want anyone to think I’m not picking on the guy, he’ll admit it himself. His Blog is a little difficult to follow the progress on as there is no distinct category for the project, but it seems to be a subset of his skateboard category. Geez, I think he programmed his own blog software too. Here are some, uh highlights: Video – Source code for the controller – board design – building the frame – Gyroscope problems – more building I still say he’s cooler than this guy.
Hopeless Old Men on Skateboards volume one
The first book is available in both color and econo black and white versions a and as a downloadable pdf here. Buy the book, it’s much better than those Garfield collections you like so much.
Shrinky Dink Skateboards
The beauty is, it gets smaller, see? Insert joke about street skating decks here. Shrinky Dinks used to be pretty popular, but they don’t seem to be around much anymore. Maybe it’s because the patent expired and someone figured out a way to apply the technology to inkjet paper. The company’s official web site doesn’t mention them. This is the Shrinky Shiny Skateboard kit, from another company, which also appears to be discontinued. I found it on eBay in 2005 and put it on the old hard drive.
Dis-ORD-erly Conduct.
Who says vert ramps don’t occur naturally in the “street?” (I smell an idea for one of MC’s skatepark terrain comics.) This must be one of those elliptical transitions that were all the rage for about a month in the late 80’s. Actually, back in the 80’s these support structures for the upper level at Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport (or ORD) were totally skateable, or at least I was never busted there. Unfortunately, I don’t have any actual skate photos of this spot, as I only rode here while waiting to be picked up. I never made a “skate specific” trip to the airport. These pictures are from when I was traveling back to Chicago in 2000, at which point some sort of skate stopper devices had been added, for how long I don’t know. I remember these being as fast as regular U-shaped slides. Do you have any action shots from this spot? Send ’em in!
AST China Vert: Do you care?
They offered to send me some pictures from the vert event in China, and I said Sure, I’d check them out, and see how they went over on the site. They were kind of stingy. Pierre-Luc Gagnon won the vert event (2nd – Andy Macdonald, 3rd- Adam Taylor) and Sandro Dias’ 900 won the best trick. I don’t know if there was a street event, all they sent was vert info. You can read the canned press and see the pics after the jump. Who knows, maybe you are curious about what Zhou Qiang, President of Xingyi New Media Investment Company has to say.
Skateboard Summer Camp
There are large corporate type skateboard summer camps that everyone knows about, but if you want to stay closer to home (Unless you live in Poland) or closer to your (parent’s) hard earned cash, there are usually local options available. The Department (of Skateboarding) has been doing these for a while, and Windells too. Raise you hand if you’ve ever been hit with the buzkill of having a busload of kids show up at your favorite skatepark. I’ve got mixed emotions about pay-to-skate facilities bussing kids around to neighborhood parks. But what about your local Parks and Recreation district? Well they operate the parks (in most cases) so it makes perfect sense. Portland Parks and Recreation has a series of skate camps and learn to skate events going on this summer. You can get details here It’s a PDF link, and you have to sift through it to get all the relevant info, but one interesting thing is that there’s an event planned at Burnside, of all places. Some might find that inappropriate, while others might recognize this as an important step in maintaining relations with the city and a skatepark that is technically still existing on a trial basis.…
Where have I seen that before?
Threadless is a t-shirt site that has visitors vote on what designs they will sell. My brother spotted this one and sent it my way, I couldn’t find it when I went to the site. I would have voted for it.
Friday T&A on S&A: Joyce Blair
I originally saw this gal in a 2006 Time Magazine photo essay on skateboarding titled Hot Wheels. The caption said “Groovy: Singer Joyce Blair strikes a pose with her board in Hyde Park, London, in 1965.” I guess Joyce was a singer, dancer and actress. She even appeared on the Benny Hill Show. I couldn’t find any information about this publicity shoot, although I did find two images on a site that shows you images that are for looking at but not using, which is the vague way they are trying to get around the fact that these are from the Getty Images collection. So, yeah, that’s my reasoning too. Look at these images but don’t actually use them. For some reason they changed the location (and name) on the watermark. I just happened to have the old ones saved so I was able to piece together a clean one without the photoshop clone stamp.
Calling out Jeff Kendall
That’s right, we’ve got a 20+ year old beef and we’re calling out Jeff Kendall. Sure, he’s probably got a life and has moved on, but we haven’t, obviously. I would say we’re tryng to embarass him with these old pictures, but there isn’t really anything embarrassing about them, considering he was 14 years old when these were taken by friend Bob Pribble Swamp: Kendall is 14 years old in those pictures. The year is 1981 and he’s riding my old Losi Variflex deck on some ACS trucks and Kanoa Rollout wheels. Why do I remember all this useless information? The Roxbury Ramp was located at Chip Jones house in Indianapolis, IN. Check them out after the jump.











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