Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Los Angeles with Steven Farmer





Like myself, Steven Farmer is a recent transplant to sunny Southern California, but it was in his hometown of Portland, Oregon where I first met Steven this summer while I was on tour with Hometown Heroes. So when I heard that he had also moved to the LA-area I hit him up, and on a particularly hazy day we met up in LA to go skate.


Steven Farmer warms up with a Front Board.
We shot another trick on this rail, but I am going to hold on to that photo for now...



After a fairly polite kick-out from that rail we made our way across UCLA's campus to another spot, this brick out-ledge, and with the last rays of golden sunlight Steven quickly landed about 4 tricks, including this Back Blunt and Crooked Grind.


I'm sure you'll be seeing much more of this dude.

Monday, November 15, 2010

Tutorial: DIY Sandbags



This post is a break from the normal kind of content I post here, but one that I thought might be helpful to fellow photographers and filmmakers who have a bit of DIY spirit in them.
I now live in California but I grew up in Chicago, and while most true Chicagoans know that our Windy City moniker had more to do with our politicians than our weather, it does in fact get pretty windy in our Midwestern city. Inclement weather has never done much to keep Chicago skateboarders indoors or off our boards, and on an especially windy day last spring I was reminded why I had been meaning to make some sandbags when a gust toppled one of lightstands, along with the flash that was atop it.
Sandbags (like these) are a staple on photo and video production sets to keep things from toppling over, and protect both the expensive gear and the people beneath it. It makes sense to me that when setting up 8 foot tall lightstands around fast-moving skateboards one should do something to ensure those stands stay upright. The store-bought sandbags are great, but I couldn't bring myself to pay $30 a piece for a zippered sack, so I set out to make some of my own, and thought I would share my process with whoever reads this blog.
Calling these "DIY" might conjure images of two rocks with a string between them, but my goal was to make some sandbags as close to the store-bought quality as possible. That said, I am by no means a skilled seamster, so this project is nothing you can't do with your mom's sewing machine and a 5-minute introduction on how to use it.
1. For the size I determined would be best for my stands and purposes you will start with two 11"x17" rectangles of Cordura, or a similar fabric. I got mine on eBay for about $5 per yard, and one yard is way more than enough to make a few sandbags.
Put right-sides (the the side of the fabric you want to face out) together and pin them. Sew along one long edge about 1/2" form the edge. (If you know what basting is, do that here, if not, normal sewing is fine.)

2. Remove the pins and open the fabric so it lays flat. Pin that 1/2" of fabric on the edge down flat.

3. Lay your zipper right-side facing down along your seam. Pin it down.

4. With your machine's zipper foot sew along both edges of the zipper, then across the bottom of it, removing pins as you go. (If you've had any trouble up to this point just google "How to sew a zipper" and you'll find lots of tutorials that probably describe it better than me.)

5. Fold the fabric back in half, right-sides together and pin it together. 

6. Make it a pouch by sewing along the 3 non-zipper edges 1/2" from the edge.

7. Open the zipper, and it will still be sewn shut behind that. Using a seam-ripper take out the stitching behind the zipper so the pouch is open. With that side open, you can remove the pins and flip the pouch right-side out. If you have done everything right up to this point you will now have a functional zipper-pouch with no holes.

8. Now we'll separate the pouch into two separate areas for sand with a crease down the middle for hanging. To do this, fold the pouch in half (perpendicular to the zipper) and crease it so you can see where the middle is. Sew along that crease, stopping just shy of zipper.

9. Now you have two compartments for sand, and all that's left is to attach a strap for carrying or hanging. Take a 20" length of nylon webbing in your color of choice and sew either end to the under-side of the bag right along that middle seam you just sewed. When carrying the bag this strap will be holding the weight of the bag so make sure you sew it on securely.

(Pictured here is the finished product. The two on the left are the size I describe here. The one on the right is bigger and turned out to be way too big to be practical, so I'd stick to the size I describe or smaller.)
That's it! Open the zipper, put a zip-lock bag full of sand in each side and close it up. You'll feel a lot better putting your $400+ flash at the bottom of a stair set with a couple sandbags helping keep it upright, and having made them yourself you'll be stoked to have an extra $90 in your pocket over the guy who buys a few sandbags.



For any any questions or clarifications feel free to comment.

Thursday, October 7, 2010

2 More from SF, Pat Binkley and Mike Davis

Patrick Binkley, Nosebluntslide, San Fracisco, CA

Pat Binkley slides a long Noseblunt while two lovers walk back from their tryst in view of the Golden Gate Bridge.

Mike Davis, Ollie, San Francisco, CA

Mike Davis Ollies the big gap at the San Francisco Library.

Saturday, October 2, 2010

Skateboarder's Sunset Rampage


Back in Illinois I had a mini-ramp in my folks' backyard that was host to some pretty epicly good times. Something about mini-ramps just brings out all kinds; street skaters, tranny skaters, lurkers; all just there for a mellow good time. So when Skateboarder Magazine decided to put a mini-ramp on a Hollywood hotel's pool deck it's no surprise that the event was such a success. Everyone from Louie Lopez to Andrew Reynolds to Lance Mountain was there, and my friends at Skateboarder had me out to man the party-cam for the evening. Check out the recap with photos from Jaime Owens, Jonathan Mehring, and myself online here, and next month's Mag.

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Pat Binkley in Frisco


Slowly but surely I am going through all my street photos from tour this summer. Here is one more for you from early June. Patrick Binkley reps his Couch-Tour-VIP-orange while blasting a big ollie on a little hip in San Francisco, CA.

Saturday, September 18, 2010

Summer Recap


Peter over at rEvolution waded through gigs and gigs of Adam and G's footage from this summer and condensed it into this clip. Check it out

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Starting in on the Summer's Photos - Mike Davis, Drop In

Mike Davis, Drop In


This ditch spot in California was the first real street skating we did this summer on the Hometown Heroes tour, and while most people wouldn't see a nearly vertical wall with a drainage hole in it as a spot, Mike Davis from Portland had no trouble dropping in on it. In fact he had so little trouble that he didn't mind doing it multiple times so the filmer and I could both get multiple angles. I could pick which one I like better, but it's the internet, so why not put up both.

So, everyone waiting to see their photos from this summer, you can see I am working on them and I promise they are coming. This is the first of 3-months' worth of rad skating. Lots more to come...

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Two Street Photos from CA

Before I get around to working on all the photos I shot this summer I wanted to catch up on some older stuff gathering some metaphorical dust on my harddrive. Here are two photos from my trip out to California last January

Tucker Phillips, Ollie, LA


Skating around downtown LA this brick volcano spot is a pretty safe bet for a good time. Tucker boosted a little ollie before Paul road a Segway.

Tylor O, Front Blunt across the gap, Huntington Beach


I have known Tylor for a pretty long time, so he is used to waiting for photos from me. Between my last post and this, he should be pretty stoked. He didn't come with Tucker, Paul and me on our trip out, but Tylor happened to be southern California at the same time, so we did some skateboarding and he got a Front Blunt across this Huntington Beach ledge.

Tylor O's Ramp Destruction Party

After the Hometown Heroes finals at the X-Games in LA and shooting photos at Maloof in Orange County another summer on the road has come to an end. I have a few free weeks before my big trip West so I'm doing my best to catch up on editing some photos, and some of those should make it here to the blog. Here's the first of those

Tylor O'Connor, Blunt Fakie at the Ramp Destruction Party


Back in April I got a message from Tylor O'Connor that he was moving out of his apartment and the affectionately titled Slum Dog Mini-ramp needed to get torn down. Tylor's not one to do anything quietly (ask his neighbors), so he threw a little Sunday night party to let everyone get their last tricks in on the mini-mini-ramp. The session ended with Tylor getting a Blunt-Fakie on a TV, and then smashing it.

Tylor O'Connor, Ramp Destruction Party


Sorry for the wait for the photos, Tylor! Keep your eyes here for more catch-up photos coming soon...

Friday, July 9, 2010

Summer on the Road

Between graduating from college in Chicago, moving out of my apartment there, and a day later hitting the road on a tour that has me in a new city nearly every day, this blog has had a bit of a dry spell. That said, my photos and I have been anything but absent from the internet.



If we are friends on Facebook then I am sure you have seen my Mobile Uploads blowing up the past few months, but if we're not then you can still keep up with all the day to day goings-ons of Hometown on its Twitter, which I am pretty much the only one to post to and is the destination for all my phone-photos seconds after I snap them. Follow @hhskate. If you're not into the Twitter thing you can see these same photos dished off to http://philsphone.tumblr.com

HH Denver 2010


For the updates from Hometown Heroes contests check out http://hhskate.com/photos/. I shoot every contest that Hometown puts on and the photos are usually up within a couple of days.

Chicago, IL Zumiez Best Foot Forward Am Contest 2010


In addition to Hometown I was also brought on as the photographer for the Zumiez Best Foot Forward Am Contests Series and the Zumiez Couch Tour. The Couch Tour consisted of 12 stops across the US where Zumiez would construct a small festival in a mall parking lot, have bands play, and put up a skate course for the BFF contest, as well as a pro demo. As crazy and hectic as those days were, (not to mention the sleepless nights of photo-editing that usually followed) I met a lot of cool folks and had a fun time being part of the tour.
All of my photos from Couch Tour are online now at http://couchtour.zumiez.com, just click any of the dates at the top, then click Photos, or for better quality check them out on flickr at http://www.flickr.com/photos/zumiez/ where any of the 2010 Couch Tour or Best Foot Forward photos were shot by me.
All of the BFF photos are on its separate site at http://www.zumiezbestfootforward.com/photos



Aside from all the contests and events, Hometown is really about skateboarding, and I have been doing a ton of it, as well as shooting a ton of it. I have been lucky to meet, skate with, and share a smelly van with some really sick people this summer, and once I have time to actually go through them all, I have a ton of skate photos from across the country that I am hyped to share.
I am super psyched that Shak and everyone brought me on this trip, and it's not over yet, so be sure to keep up at the Hometown site and especially the Twitter @hhskate

Sunday, April 25, 2010

2-for-1 at Ashland and Addison

Blue ledge, blue bank, ollie up to bank, Ashland bank to ledge...whatever you call this spot, it is blocks from my apartment. But as convenient as it would be for me to skate and shoot photos here regularly, I totally understand why it's not the most popular spot in the city. The sidewalk is littered with everything from gravel to broken glass, then you ollie up onto the chunky, slanted, narrow blue ledge, and then try to get your trick within the few feet that are actually waxed.
That said, there have been some pretty cool tricks done on it, and some people find it fun. So here are a couple photos of suburbanites Mike Kadar and Jim Farrell getting down on a back tail and back 5-0, respectively.

Saturday, April 17, 2010

Dalba, BS Feeble

Dalba, BS Feeble

If you check my flickr with any regularity you might remember my post last fall that featured Dalba taking a bite out of Chicago Avenue. Here he is again with a land. Dalba has a unique bag of tricks that is always entertaining and unexpected. This bank-to-ledge in Chicago isn't the biggest spot ever, but a perfectly balanced back feeble with some warm sun backlight makes for a pretty solid photo opportunity.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Finishing College and Summer Plans


Today is April 15th, which for most people means it's Tax Day, but for me it means that I have exactly one month until I graduate with a Bachelor of Arts in Photography from Columbia College Chicago. I am realizing that the last semester of college is the antithesis to the last semester of high school. At this point of high school you've been accepted to college, finished the bulk of your coursework, and are just looking forward to a leisurely summer before going off to college, but where I am in school now is just about the most stressful time of college. I am putting everything I have learned and experienced over the past 4 years into the materials and projects I need to get started in the photography world, from a new website, print portfolio, personal projects, and everything else. So I have a lot to do in 30 days. But once the semester and my college career are over I am fortunate to have some big opportunities coming my way.

Beginning May 17th, just two days after graduation, I am hitting the road to shoot photos for another skateboard tour, Hometown Heroes. You can check that link out for more about the tour, but essentially I will be doing the same thing as last summer, traveling in a van with a bunch of skateboarders, shooting photos of local skate contests all over the country, and doing a lot of street skating. I am really thankful to Shak, Brian, and Molly, and everyone at Birdsong 3/Revolution for choosing me for this tour, as it will give me a chance to spend the summer doing what I love, as well as make my future plans of moving to California possible.

Here is the list of everywhere I will be this summer:

May 8th   Chicago, IL
May 9th   Indianapolis, IN
May 17th   Madison, WI
May 18th   Milwaukee, WI
May 20th   Indianapolis, IN
May 22nd   Tulsa, OK
May 24th   Phoenix, AZ
May 25th   Las Vegas, NV
May 28th   Seattle, WA
May 29th   Seattle, WA
May 30th   Portland, OR
May 31st   Portland, OR
June 5th   San Francisco, CA
June 6th   San Francisco, CA
June 9th   Salt Lake City, UT
June 12th   Denver, CO
June 14th   Denver, CO
June 17th   Dallas, TX
June 18th   Houston, TX
June 19th   Houston, TX
June 21st   New York, NY
June 23rd   Baltimore, MD
June 24th   Philadelphia, PA
June 25th   Philadelphia, PA
June 26th   Northern NJ
June 27th   Cincinnati, OH
June 29th   Chicago, IL
July 1st   Minneapolis, MN
July 2nd   Minneapolis, MN
July 3rd   Des Moines, IA
July 5th   Kansas City, MO
July 7th   Lincoln, NE
July 9th   Oklahoma City, OK
July 11th   Nashville, TN
July 13th   Atlanta, GA
July 18th   Phoenix, AZ
July 19th   Las Vegas, NV
July 20th   Los Angeles, CA
July 29th   Los Angeles, CA
July 30th   Los Angeles, CA
July 31st   Los Angeles, CA
August 1st   Los Angeles, CA



If anyone sees our paths crossing this summer, let me know! Everyone else, keep up with my adventures here on the blog, on the Hometown site, and for the social media junkies, follow me on twitter and tumblr. See you on the road!

Thursday, April 8, 2010

Tim Johnson, Wallride

In addition to the lifestyle stuff on the side, I've been shooting skating more than I have in years, not to mention skating myself like I did in high school. I'm sitting on some of those photos, but here is one from a few weeks ago.

Tim Johnson, Wallride

Tim said that he had been eyeing up this thin piece of curved plywood on a Fulton Market fence for months, and as soon as the snow melted enough for him to do so, Tim got the wallride he had wanted all winter. Here's to spring!

Monday, March 29, 2010

Jay Reilly's Lifestyle Work and Why I'm Making Cheesy Photos


While trying to shoot more lifestyle stuff for my book (which needs to be completed before my rapidly approaching graduation date!) I have been looking at a lot of lifestyle work from skate photographers, whether they would label it lifestyle or not, as well as photographers who specialize in that type of work outside of skateboarding. One who I recently came across is Jay Reilly, a lifestyle and editorial photographer based out of Oceanside, California.




Jay has a really solid portfolio and his images illustrate the strength of a good lifestyle/editorial image, which is its ability to tell a story. I love shooting skate photos. The technical and creative aspects that come together in a great skate photo are the best thing for me. But sometimes that one image can't illustrate all the other things that really make the trick as crazy as it is, like the rocks that had to be swept away, the sign you had to put over the big crack in the run up, the four times you came previously but got kicked out, not being able to get the tightness of your truck just right, or the hour of tries that chipped your board and skinned your hands before finally sticking it.

I know that to put the label of "lifestyle" on the photos I'm making right now would strike a lot of skaters, myself included, as kind of corny. But at the risk of looking like a Gatorade ad, I think it's rad seeing everything that went into getting a trick, because we all know that as awesome as the split second that a skate photo shows is, it is only a tiny part of what we really do as skateboarders.

Monday, March 1, 2010

Lifestyle?

Mills Films Dalba

It didn't take too many portrait shoots to realize that I'm really awkward taking pictures of people who aren't doing something, and that that awkwardness translates into the picture. So instead of straight portraits I am slightly redirecting myself to shooting "lifestyle" photos. If this image of Adam Mills filming Dalba is any indication, I think I am going to like making these pictures a lot more and I think they will look a lot better in my portfolio as well. Now Chicago just needs to warm up so I can get people out skating again!

Saturday, February 27, 2010

Another Friday at The Beerics

BeericsPartyCam Shotgun


It's winter in Chicago. Still. And there is plenty of snow on the ground to prove it.
With tediously long winters and the nearest indoor park being a 45-minute drive (and $12) away, skateboarders in Chicago have to take things into their own hands to avoid hibernation. One example of this DIY effort is The Beerics. Basically a bunch of dudes moved to Chicago from Michigan, got a house in unassuming Roscoe Village, and built the best ramp their 15'x15'x8' garage would allow.

BeericsPartyCam - jessen, Blunt Kickflip Fakie


In addition to building this ramp, they started a website lightheartedly spoofing Steve Berra's Berrics, and putting a Chicago spin on it. www.TheBeerics.com is the result. Every Friday skaters and onlookers cram into the standing-room-only garage with beers in hand to skate or watch their buddy attempt a trick for Fifth Try Friday, who has to shotgun a beer after each failed attempt.

BeericsPartyCam - Tucker


I could go on about how much fun it is and how psyched I am to get to ride my skateboard in the dead of winter with a bunch of good dudes, but instead just go to the site and watch a couple videos and I think you'll understand for yourself.

BeericsPartyCam - Ely

BeericsPartyCam - Paul Stacey, Kickflip Fakie

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Skateboarder Portraits

Erik Lundquist

It is my last semester of college so I am making my best effort to round out my portfolio and make it the best it can be. When I visited some photo editors out in California I was reminded more than once of the glaring hole in my portfolio - portraits. So, this semester I am focusing on that. This is the first shot of that effort. Lots more to come...

Monday, January 18, 2010

On the Road


For about two weeks now I have been gone from the icy Chicago winter on a western adventure. Tucker Phillips, Paul Stacey and I piled into my Cr-V and just drove. You can check out our trip thus far and keep up with the rest over at http://MidwestToWest.tumblr.com