graphic design · letterpress printing · illustration
The excellent Craigmod blog has the most in-depth, well illustrated and soulful review of a piece of equipment I've ever read. and I've read alot of them.
Thanks to Toby Everett, who is not so much against it, as bemused by it.
William (Buckles) Woodcock has a circus history blog with tons of images. He's an old-time circus man with a long history (at least his Dad was an elephant man, maybe further back, I don't know).
With the demise of Kodachrome, and my recent circus visiting binge, I thought these images would be nice to look at.
then you can look at this.
If you don't, you'd better make the time.
FUNNY
In the butt
FUNNIER
Fuck
you've got to click the 'this way>' button on that site.
OK. If you want to see where I'm going with this, skip to the last video. It starts a little slow, (with the kid balancing his bike across the top of an iron fence, and falling, twice) but will quickly blow your mind.
If you'd like to travel my thought process for a bit, save that for last.
Skateboarding and trick bicycling have followed similar arcs since the early 70's. Skateboarding went from sedate sidewalk surfing to slashing ballets in empty pools in just a few years.
70's Skate Footage from Cavin Brothers on Vimeo.
In the 80's, skating split into separate sects. Pool (and purpose built ramps, together called 'vert') skating evolved while a small group started 'freestyling' on flat ground. Somewhere in there, the term 'street skating' was introduced so that the stuff that most people did most of the time had a name.
Funny that the bicycle had been around for over a hundred years by this time. But it seemed a little behind the times in terms of the level of craft in stunting.
If we flat ignore cycling in circus and fairgrounds, we can say that bike trickery began to approach the level of the skaters by the mid 80's. BMX had grown from the 70's into organized racing and freestyle. Freestylers both rode vert and did circus tricks on the flat, combining the split disciplines of skating.
Sometime in 1984, a skate magazine ran a piece on 15 year old Mark Gonzales.
I'm going to call this a milestone. A full spread photo sequence showed his adaptation of a vert trick, the Ollie, to the street.
Boom.
Vert skating essentially died in just a few years, BMX mostly disappeared and by the early 90's there was just one skateboard shape and every single trick was based on the Ollie.
This one trick made the world a skatepark.
With the Ollie, freestyle tricks became airborne and took over.
There is a weird guy spazzing out to Merillion over in the corner.
Bicycle trials, or trialsin. European, completely unrelated to any of this stuff and totally weird.
Somewhere between Motorcycle race sideshow and now, trials riders started, basically, street skating. With the dual influence of 60mph downhill mountain bikers and skaters, BMXers returned and started street skating too.
Skateboarding is enjoying a comfortable popularity, but it's bicyclists now pushing the edges upward...
and outward
This kid has everything. Skateboarding's urban appropriation, trialsin's obnoxious skill, and the BMXer's hollow-boned flight together.
Something new is coming.
Come ride your bike in New Bedford.
Friday May 1. 6pm
Ring the Bell!
I've posted on my personal blog about Fairhaven's upcoming school vote. I encourage you to forward the post to anyone you know in Fairhaven and encourage them to vote NO on this Wednesday, November 2.
www.shoobedoobe.org
OK, so it's a sunset, but you get the picture.
Though New Bedford has remained a bustling hub of activity since sometime summer '08, I have not been there to document it. But there is a house in Fairhaven that has benefited from my absence, and my back is killin' me.
I'm glad folks are still dropping by to grind through the archives, we'll have more for you to see promptly.
That's right, we.
I say welcome to Cmiper, my new co-author. He comes loaded with a healthy backlog of New Bedfordian visual loot, and an interest in sharing it. So at least every few to few and a couple days, you'll see another snap of our seven-mile slice of heaven.
Please let us know of any photo-goings on about the area, and stay tuned for photo-strolls and events of interest to those interested.
cheers