2 custom lumberjacks headed home with customers this week.
H&H
Another of those Hendy and Harbers has come out of the woodwork ;well acutally this is the fifth one we've had on the blog - they're just becoming so common ! If only two hundred were made then seeing five isn't bad going. This one was sent in by Robin, who's had it for many a year. Its a 7 ft diamond tail, shaped by the infamous Buttercup ,Australian lifeguard who worked Fistral beach and did some guest shaping for H&H. Made around 1971, looks in some ways quite a modern template, especially the front half. Diamond tails didn't last for long and were soon overtaken by swallows around '73 and classic pins. This one has a replacement fin. Cheers to Robin.
Liking the style of the happy couple's departure yesterday. I'm not a big one for weddings but actually enjoyed watching this one, and one of the best bits (apart from the ridiculous hats the women are obliged to wear )was them driving off in the 60s Aston Martin he borrowed from his dad. It was given to Prince Charles on his 21st birthday by his mum....the perks of being a prince. There are apparently some photos of Charles surfing in the 70s , anyone got any ?
Von Sol Train Coming Down The Tracks!
First Wave!
My good friend Adam, and his son Elijah, enjoying Eli's first wave together.
(The Surf Thump is my favorite longboard too, Elijah)
(The Surf Thump is my favorite longboard too, Elijah)
Labels:
Adam Goodman,
Friends,
Surf Thump
Black Deer Surfboards France
Paul Lefevre is a very talented artist and surfboard builder . I first met him a couple of years ago here on the Gold Coast at DMS working for Dan Mac Donald. He was a sander and polisher . He moved back to France and works with Tristan Mausse at their company " The Lucky Bastards Glassing Co." but has his own brand Black Deer surfboards.
Here is Paul working on a new shape for himself.
"The core it's an EPS high density, with wood veneer skin, No fiber, No resin (only for plug and edge) the finish is multiple coats of varnish,at the moment I try many different woods, (light, hard, and local one) always to make more light and more flex.... the boards is around 3kg"
Here is Paul working on a new shape for himself.
"The core it's an EPS high density, with wood veneer skin, No fiber, No resin (only for plug and edge) the finish is multiple coats of varnish,at the moment I try many different woods, (light, hard, and local one) always to make more light and more flex.... the boards is around 3kg"
Paul is a very talented guy , making some great looking boards. Check him out at :
http://blackdeersurf.blogspot.com/
http://polish-artworks.blogspot.com
Labels:
Black Deer Surfboards,
France.
some more Tig history
Tigger Newling has had a look in his old photo box and pulled out these classic shots, featuring a few of the beautiful boards he made in 1970, and I love the shot of him and Graham Nile on the way to the Worlds below. Thanks to Tigger and lets hope he does some more delving into that box. Tigger and Graham Nile with Tig boards in Manly en route to the 1970 Bells beach World titles in Australia. Thanks to Roger Mansfield for the photo. At this time Graham was surfing Tig shapes.
From the same year - Tigger and his quiver of Tig shapes bound for Morocco and Portugal, January 1970.
Tigger on the yellow butterfly gun at Carcavelos, Lisbon, Portugal. Photos by Beverley Williams.
This is an old Tig that surfaced recently on a surf forum, great turquoise tint . This one says 'Neil's rasta special', though Tig can't remember which Neil it was. It's interesting to hear what Tigger thinks of these old boards. -
'' Every time one of these crops up I get frustrated by the fallibility of my memory. I am one of those people who think they can remember everything... but confronted by photos like this you realize just how much you have forgotten. Isn't there some saying about "Those who lived through the 60s..."Anyway. I cant quite work out who Neil was, or the rasta connection. Could have been Kiwi Neil Wernham who worked as a spray artist at Tris surfboards, or Neil from Plymouth who was one of the Trevose Head Surf Crew. Or yet another.The weird thing about this one, from my perspective is that the shape, and size are from my jolly good surfboards period around 1975/6. But the sticker is from the Tig surfboards period which ended in the late 60s. Frankly it just looks too sophisticated to be a Tig. And rasta seems more 70s somehow too.I do have a really dim memory of one or two of my customers requesting the earlier sticker instead of the Jolly Good Surfboards sticker. Maybe that is it.The green solid on the underside would be a repair.That turquoise on the deck came straight out of my favourite tin of transparent pigment. A cure for Seasonal Affective Disorder way Cheaper than the airfare to sun and turquoise waves.
This is an old board Alex picked up recently ,which under all those layers of paint could be one of the first Tigs , from the late 60s.Tigger was quite intrigued by this one - ''The red "Flames" board you have there is an interesting one.Bit Battered and superficially modified by the look of it, but probably genuine. I don't really remember doing hand drawn stickers except right at the very beginning so it is probably a very early one 68_69_70 perhaps. It is possible that the original sticker faded and it has been redrawn over the top in pen.I seem to remember I usually hand wrote dates on the stringer under the glass - just in front or behind the fin. 10th board for 1969 would have the number 1069, for example. Any writing like that lurking?Looks to me like this is was originally a transparent yellow tinted board that has been glossed later in its life with solid red, then the flames. Very hotrod. You might want to remove the red and see what lies below. Give it to a sander in a surfboard factory for the added gloss coat to be be sanded off and you could even have it re-glossed. Some of the foam looks like it may have collapsed a bit. Had really dodgy foam in the early days. Lots of faults in it.Very interesting. I quite like the shape. Alot like the boards I saw Michael Petersen and Wayne Lynch ride at the world titles in Bells Australia in April 1970 - I did some like that when I got back in the Summer of 70. What is the earliest date on the registration stickers?
Panels of White | Skies of Blue
9'7 Surf Thump by Griff-Kyle, Diagonal Deck Patch, Mahogany D-fin by the Gull.
Summer surfboard riding.
photoden.
Summer surfboard riding.
photoden.
Labels:
367 Old Newport,
Dave Allee,
Fine Surfing Boards,
Surf Thump
Attaching a fibreglass tab for a fin box on to a paulownia spitfire fin.
5 mm Brass rods are inserted through the tab into the wooden fin
The finished 10inch spitfire cutaway fin
The finished 10inch spitfire cutaway fin
Labels:
fin box,
spitfire fin
PROTOTYPE: Nugget TD
Black line is the TD, the white line is the original Nugget. |
Andy Pierce's 5'3" Nugget TD |
Daniel Jones 5'0" Nugget TD |
Andy Pierce 5'3 x 19 7/8 x 2 3/8 Nugget TD |
Daniel Jones 5'0" x 19 x 2 1/4 Nugget TD |
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