Categories
Skateboarding News

New Site Update

Droids have one thing on their side when it comes down to the nitty gritty and it’s the fact that they can bloody travel anywhere in the world with a computer and a mug of coffee and settle down for a bit of work.

Much to our surprise last week, Crossfire’s chief web nut ‘Nav’ decided that Sheffield was getting dark and decided to head to Australia, Melbourne in fact, so if you are out there and want to say hello ( i know loads of people from Australia visit us weekly) then get in touch and take him out skating!

Nav will be enjoying the bar-b-q’s and beach bums whilst building you version 3 of this lovely webiste that we hopefully will have live for you in the early stages of the New Year. He promises some surprises and a technical wonderland, so watch this web space!

Categories
Skateboarding Product Reviews

Darkstar Lightning Cores

Damn son… Darkstar just keep coming with the goods. If you’re a Crossfire reader, then you’ll know I was pretty stoked on the Darkstar Armorlight board , so when I received the new Darkstar Lightning Core wheels, I didn’t hesitate to drop my old tyres and hook up a set.

Apparently the Lightning Cores use the mechanics of a inner soft core and an harder outer core to create maximum effect on speed and grip. I’ve never heard of such a concept, with most wheel companies doing the opposite (hard on the inside, soft on the outside) and this results in wheels falling apart if the mould is wrong.

Well, one push was all I needed to roll past the competition smooth as a stallion. Weird as it may seem, the physics of these wheels actually works, so you’re rolling happy around the streets, skateparks and concrete bowls without fear of losing speed. In fact, Darkstar generated three different models to cope with all types of terrain.

I tried the 52mm 96A models which are supposed to show optimal efficiency on the street and in parks which they did, whilst my mated tried the smaller 51mm 98A sets and couldn’t complain either.

Add to this already very positive report the fact that the wheels don’t turn yellow and don’t flatspot… At all! Ladies and gentlemen, we have a winner!

9/10
Ralph Lloyd-Davis
28.11.06

Categories
Skateboarding News

Puzzle Fall 06

Get downloading because the new issue of Puzzle video magazine is out. In the Fall 06 issue watch the likes of Phillip Schuster, Simon Pedersen, Michael Mackrodt, Severin Von Ow, Italy Slam Trick, the Globe Global Assault, and much much more.

Click here for the mag.

Categories
Skateboarding News

Skartist action figures..?

A young artist by the name of Michael Levitt has produced four action figure dolls of famous skate artists Mark Gonzales, Neckface, Shepard Fairey, Bigfoot and Barry McGee (Twist).

The dolls are for sale and look pretty rad, so got grab a couple.

Source: www.skatedaily.net

Categories
Skateboarding News

Non-stop Xmas party

Nottingham’s SOS, Non-Stop Skateshop, is popping bottles and smooching under the mistle toe for their Christ mas carnage party on 7th December downstairs at the Stealth club.

Festivities start at 9pm till father Christmas climbs down the chimney.

Categories
Skateboarding Product Reviews

Death Enjoy Tee

The Enjoy Death logo t-shirt from Death Skateboards has been one of the most successful in UK skateboarding since it was sent to skate shops a few years ago. Since then, the company has built an international roster to attach to it’s current swine-filled UK Team that takes pride on it’s simple but effective branding.

But now, this popular t-shirt logo has grown in size, to be honest i have always worn one and hoped it would grow in the wash but thankfully Zorlac and his Australian design team have unleashed the full version which will be one of the most saught after t-shirts in the UK alongside the wings of the Unabomber this xmas.

You can’t review t-shirts but you can explain how good it feels to rock something that makes you feel proud and this is it. Pick it up in skater owned shops for Xmas or die.

Chuck Bangers
28.11.06

Categories
Features

Tuukka ‘Deeli’ Kaila – Triple Shot

Tuukka was a unanimous choice to join Kingpin. His work for Finnish magazine Numero made all the others look foolish by comparison, and his still life photography is still displayed in posh locations across Scandinavia. We have other photographers who may be better at snatched moments or suggested intimacies, but none who are as rounded in their ability as Deeli. When it comes to skateboarding photography, he is the finished article. He never misses. He never misses“.– Niall Neeson – Kingpin Mag Editor

Full name?

My name is Tuukka Kaila, but most people call me Deeli. I never quite know how to introduce myself.

How long have you been a photographer?

I started taking photos when I was about ten, when my dad let me use his OM-1. I started studying photography in 95. But if you mean when did photography become a profession that pays my rent, I guess sometime at the end of the 90’s.

How did you get into skate photography?

By accident, really. As a skater, photos of skating were always around me, but I really got more serious about photography through studying printmaking and then switching onto photos. At the time, I didn’t really think much of skate photography; I was convinced that skate photos didn’t have any artistic merit, they all looked the same and they had no meaning beyond looking nice. I hated the fisheye, I hated harsh lighting, I thought the grainy contrasty BW was a thing of the past that had been done to death by photo journalists and various snappers from the 50’s on and had nothing more to give to me.

My formal education, very much in the conceptualist, postmodernist vein, told me that what mattered was the meaning, not the aesthetic. You know, pictures of bits of text or some house where someone or other did great things some time, perhaps a series of buckets used to transport the blood of these or those victims, hundreds of them, all shot in the exact same way – that sort of thing. Skate photos, to me, were all about the aesthetic, no meaning behind the surface.

Then in 98 a friend of mine approached me with the idea of starting a skate magazine he wanted to call Numero and asked me to be part of it. In the beginning, the understanding was that I wouldn’t really be shooting skating, but basically that’s what photographers working in skate mags do, so in a couple of years I was pretty deep into skate photography. I realized it was actually far from easy, and looking at skate photos closer, I started having doubts about my doubts regarding the artistic side of it. I had to admit that there are the innovators and visionaries on this field just like on any other field. There has been a first skate photo ever taken with a fisheye, for example. It’s the vast number of imitators and followers and the skate media’s need for vast quantities of photos that might sometimes blur these facts a bit, but the few guys showing the way remain geniuses.

As my friend drifted away from skate photography, I got sucked in deeper and deeper, spending all the money I made from arts grants and commissions on my gear that was only meant to improve my skate photography. I’m yet to kick the habit, but at least these days the money I put into the gear comes from skate photography.

Why did this image you have submitted inspire you so much to take up photography? What effect did it have on you?

What inspired me to take up photography more than anything else, were my friends around me with cameras and their photos of each other. Later on, I got really into the theory side of photography, which I could happily spend a life time studying and trying to understand. The fact that the moment depicted in a photograph is gone and will never return is one of the single most powerful aspects of the medium. There’s no undo, there’s no second chance, that was it.

The photo above is taken by Annelies Strba, a Swiss photographer, and the people shown in it are from her immediate family. I think her work has had a huge effect on what I like in photos and how I look at photography as a whole. I saw an exhibition of her work in the Photographers Gallery in the late 90’s sometime – it was a three slide projector – installation set to a distant beating of drums on the background. She’s got a book out with these photos, but it’s long sold out. When you google her name, you get images from this other, newer book that she’s done, which is something completely different.

So in a way, the time that I sat there and saw these photos is gone just like the moments in the photos. Apart from a couple of images I cut out of the brochure and made into C-tape covers, I have nothing but my memory to refer to as far as these photos. This keeps reminding me of the relationship that photographs bear to reality. What’s gone is gone and it won’t come back. Photos, like memories, are representations of the lived moments, seen through our personal filters and interpreted to suit our personal needs. No amount of photographs will give me a chance to relive those moment.

Yet here I am, desperately recording slices of time in order to somehow preserve them. And you know what I’ve realized? There are a few moments in my life where I’ve wished I could take a photo to remember them but for one reason or another haven’t. These are the moments I remember best and miss the most.

What were the best and worst bits of advice anyone gave you in regards to photography?

Somehow the idea that we’d change all the paintings ever done depicting Jesus to a single photograph of him illustrates the power of the medium. And at the same time the responsibility of the photographer. I try to keep that in mind. As for the worst advice, I can’t remember getting any.

Have you ever felt bad about taking a photo? If so, which one?

I don’t really take photos I’d feel bad about taking. Photography can be very exploitative, but I hardly ever like a photo that doesn’t seem to have mutual respect between the photographer and the subject.

Tell us about your favourite skate shot that you have selected.

What obviously makes this photo what it is, is Harri Puupponen’s crazy position. Apart from that, I like the simplicity of it. There aren’t really any distractions that jump at me from the frame, I’m free to concentrate on the skater.

We shot it in 2003, he hadn’t been out street skating for a while and had no idea what he wanted to skate. Another friend, Kemppu, who was the art director of Numero magazine at the time, said he had a spot in mind that Harri might like.

When we got there, he knew instantly he could do something great with it, just as much as I knew I could make it look like something I’d really enjoy as a photo. We shot it for his interview in Kingpin at a time, when I didn’t work for them full time yet. They made it a cover instead and I bought another flash with the cash.

What’s the relationship like between a photographer and filmer?

Depends on the people involved, but in general I get along with filmers really well. Hopefully filmers feel the same way about me. Most filmers tend to give me the space I need and I do my best to return the favour. There’s always more than one angle.

What main advice would you give to upcoming skate photographers?

It’s not about your photo, it’s not about you, it’s about the skater and it’s about the skating. In the end, we need the skaters a whole lot more than they need us.

Are there ways of getting better/free equipment as you continue to grow or do you have to fund everything yourself?

If there is a way, I’ve missed it completely.

Please tell us about the non skate shot you have submitted and the story behind it.

I took this on a lazy afternoon sometime in 99, I think. It’s from Tallinn, Estonia. The leg on the left belongs to my future wife at the time, the smoker is her flat mate back then. Apart from having that really personal nostalgic aspect to it, I think it kind of captures that feeling of when you’re not in a hurry anywhere, there’s nothing in particular you need or even want to do.

It might have meaning just for me cause I was there and it’s my life, but I’d like to think that it serves a purpose as depicting a more general experience of a time in your life, when responsibilities haven’t caught up, when you have all the time in the world and there’s nothing to make you feel guilty about sitting on a couch drinking coffee all day and watching life go by.

Is the work of a skate photographer well paid? Do you get by in life with this income alone?

I consider myself extremely lucky to have the job I have. There aren’t many full time jobs around for skate photographers, and usually there’s a great photographer sitting on every seat available already. The life a freelance skate photographer is a constant struggle in most cases. To be able to live off this alone is amazing. Putting in the hours skate photographers do, many of us could be paid a lot more in other fields of photography. So I’d like to think that whoever remains in the game, is in it for other reasons.

Does music ever inspire your photography? What music artists can you not leave for a tour without?

I love music, but it has little to do with my photography. I hardly ever take any music on trips, I guess because I never invested in an mp3 player. There’s always someone with speakers though, so it’s a nice opportunity to hear something new.

If you were to buy a pocket snapper for capturing skating on a budget to get going, which camera would you suggest?

Point and shoots are great for a lot of things, but I wouldn’t recommend them for skate photography. Get a cheap second hand SLR instead.

Would you recommend digital or film?

Both have their strong points.

What are the benefits of using film or digital?

Generally, film has the potential of being used at whatever size you want, whereas the final size of a digital photo is determined by the initial file size. You can’t stick a memory card in an enlarger. You might not care at the time, but when you get asked to do an exhibition one day and your best photos are stamp size jpegs you’re fucked.

Film, at the moment still, has better colour and tonal range and it can cope better with detail in both the bright and dark ends of the spectrum. I’ve also learned to love the film grain I used to hate. Digital is quick and convenient, not to mention being virtually free after the initial investment, and you know instantly whether you got the photo or not. It’s also very environment friendly compared to all the nasty chemicals and toxic metals that are involved in using film.

What kit do you use?

Medium format with film and the occasional toy camera for skate stills, digi for skate sequences, then 5×4 film and a point and shoot 35mm film for lots of other things. There’s a stupid amount of flashes and batteries involved with the skate stills.

Do you have a website for your photography?

A freelance photographer without a website is basically an unemployed photographer. As I’m securely employed at the moment, though, I still haven’t got my act together on the website department.

You can find Deeli’s photography skills monthly at the wonderful Kingpin Magazine

Categories
Skateboarding News

Hawk, Bam and Vallely at Bay 66 this week?

Bay 66 skatepark took a message from the guys at Gumball yesterday who mentioned that tmrw night (28th), Tony Hawk, Bam Margera and Mike Vallely may well be skating at the park during the usual Wednesday night sesh there which should perk up an already monstrous weekly session.

Hopefully Vallely will be arriving to sort out the local chavs!See you there.

Categories
Skateboarding News

All bubble. No squeak.

Hmmmm! Aero’s are one of my favourite chocolate bars, and Jart Skateboard’s newest pro Eero Anttila isn’t half bad either! Watch the exclusive video part Eero dropped for the Perus Crew video here c/o Globe

www.jartskateboards.com

Categories
Skateboarding News

Droppin’ Science!

The UK skate company Science Skateboards has just re-launched it’s brand new website with loads of good stuff to watch, listen, read and w*** to (Just kidding!). It seems like this time they’re in it for the gusto, so show some support and check them out pronto!

In fact, if that doesn’t incite a storm of the new site, then maybe the 17 minute promo featuring Scott Howes, Dave Davies, Dan Tomlinson, Shaun Witherup and flow riders Michael Burns and Fran Sprenger might do the trick? Also available for download here so as not to rape their bandwidth to the bone!)

Still not interested? Well then plug into DJ Semantik’s 60 minute mixtape of golden era Hip-Hop! Bangin’!

www.scnc.co.uk