Just a quick ramble about the event. I think the Swayloholics Anonymous was happening at the same time. Anyone go?
Anyway, I only made it to the Expo on Saturday. That was pretty much enough for me, but I would have liked to see JP in the discussion about imported surfboards, etc. When I first walked in, I thought to myself that it would be a quick visit. It was pretty packed, and it was basically a mini trade show vibe. You can only ooh and ahh so much. Still, I wanted to wait to see the panel of "legends" and perhaps see Andreini in the shaper's booth. The booth was the full fishbowl effect. A bunch of people climbing on each other to get a glimpse into a couple of windows. It dawned on me that many of the people have very likely never actually seen a surfboard being built. I've seen my share so I didn't look on for extended periods of time. It was nice to see the first attacks on the blank and then cruise by later to contrast that with the finish work. I did end up seeing Andreini's shape and it was very tight indeed. As I posted before, the shape-off was a little weird in terms of judging guys based on being closest to the original shape. Though it wasn't a very intriguing element for me, I do think it was good to illustrate the fact that hand-built surfboards are still here and always will be. I hope it made some people appreciate it more and perhaps not take it for granted. For those who've only been off-the-rack buyers, maybe they'll create a relationship with a shaper and get a custom surfboard built personally for them.
Actually, it was at the shaper's booth that I connected with Erik Olson of Breaks Selection. As many of you know, Erik builds some very fine-looking surfboards and is a really nice guy to boot. Talking to him was a good time. In fact, for me it was the conversations and connections with people that made the event better. I spent a fair amount of time with the hull heads. Brian Hilbers of Fineline launched right into conversation and was a lot of fun to talk with. So was Kirk Putnam and a cat from Mollusk Venice (can't remember his name, good guy). There were some incredible looking blades in their stall.
Bought a few bars of eco-wax, connected with Toby (I'm supposed to meet him at 10am for the new shape; we'll see if it happens), told Sam George how much I liked his TSJ article about Sao Tome, asked John Peck a question, and that was pretty much it. Overall a pretty decent event. I'm sure it took a lot to make it happen. Bottom line, it was about surfing and surfboards; easy to complain, but worth it anyway.
Sounds like you scored at the SC. An interesting group to be sure. Since you mentioned you were getting new board from Mr. Pavel and you mentioned hulls I understand that he shapes (a long with everything else) a great hull. Looking forward to a post about the new board.
ReplyDeleteI was there on Saturday and really enjoyd the fineline/Andreini booth, the simmons replicas, the grain guys from maine, Bulkley and watching Andreini shape. I'm one of those guys who hasn't seen a lot of shaping first hand so it was a pleasure. I think a shaper's challenge with a theme like : best beachbreak destroyer, or section connector or pointbreak swooper might have been cool. Results announced after the boards were test ridden around the state. Maybe too grand a scale... Nice to see handshapes outnumber the popouts and define quality!
ReplyDeletePrana, I'm getting a bonzer from Pavel. The hull is from Andreini (a Vaquero). Ordered the Andreini a little over a month ago; the Pavel was well over a year ago. Guess which one is already at the glasser?
ReplyDeleteSmith, I like your idea about the themed shapeoff. That would give each person more creative space and they could do a short talk on why they did what they did. That would be a great way to tie in education about board building, design concepts, foam characteristics, fin setups, etc.
Added links to both of you guys. Thanks for the comments.
I have one of the Pavel bonzers thru Rainbow. One of my favorite boards ever. It was probably a scan and finished off by someone else and the board still goes unreal.
ReplyDeleteGlad you enjoyed the Expo... and I really am interested in your thoughts for the Shape-off competition next year.
ReplyDeleteKeep 'em coming!
Kindest,
SB - SACRED CRAFT Director
Thanks for checking in, Scott. That's rad.
ReplyDelete