Thursday, 29 April 2010

Back from the lab




Pretty pleased with the results back from the lab for the rolls of film shot on my Mamiya C220 and that car booty Bencini. The Mamiya is great for portraits as I was hoping. It was fun workig with it and the slowness actually seems to be way more suited to taking portraits than the speed of digital. The shot above (top) is of longboarder Candice O'Donnell and was taken as part of a shoot for the next Longboarding and Freeride magazine which will be bagged up and free with the next Wavelength.

As for the Bencini... the lady in the photo shop apologised and said it looked like the camera was a duff and not really working, but I love it! Lots of magical light leakage and randomness, perfect for little lifestyle shots and 'fingers-crossed photography'.

Oh and the County Limits project? I don't want to talk about it... one week to go to score a new county and things are not looking good!

Monday, 26 April 2010

The lemon next to the pie

So the first installment of County Limits is out in the new issue of Wavelength now. It features scores from Cornwall and Devon... the easy counties. In the meantime I'm back in Cornwall and have less than a week to try and score a new county. I'm determined to get somewhere so this project doesn't fall at the first hurdle... hopefully this is just the beginning... it's gonna get bigger.

Cuba Crisis


I lived in Bristol for about 6 years. In all that time I never really knew which county it is in, and I'm still not 100% sure. Some people say it's in North Somerset, others reckon Bristol is not really in any and is sort of a county itself, and then there are people... apparently, who refer to Bristol as being located in CUBA (the County that Used to Be Avon.) Sounds tenuous to me, but nevertheless, here I am, holed up in CUBA.

I came up at the weekend to represent Wavelength at the Bristol Surf Show. My little day dream was that a flakey chart for south Wales would improve over the weekend and give me reason to travel on from here and score Glamorgan, or maybe Pembrokeshire. But instead, it's got worse. So here I sit, deciding whether to stay in Bristol and hope there is a window of lighter onshores to persuade me to pay the Severn Bridge toll, or, head back down to Cornwall and keep an eye on some swell forecast to move down the East coast next weekend. Next weekend is a long way off for an East coast chart, and the pressure is now on as we get very close to deadline and the rest of the team are talking to me about contingency plans if I fail to score a new county in the next week.

The stress is building... I think I need a cigar

Thursday, 22 April 2010

Tools

I've been buying a few little toys recently...

I'm a sucker for collecting things so I am trying my hardest to hold back on spending any more cash on cameras and lenses, but this little one was only a few quid so it doesn't count, right?

Anyway, I'm keen to shoot this project with a mixture of cameras, all of which have their own strengths and personalities, so it I thought I'd let you know what's in my tool box in case you were wondering.

1. Canon 50D - the workhorse digi camera I use for the majority of my surf shots. With a 300m lens, a 1.4x convertor and the cropped sensor, I can get in pretty tight on the action, then I've got a few other lens for more pulled stuff and a tokina fisheye faker for the water shots.

2. Olympus E-P1 PEN - bit of a luxury item. Basically it's a high quality digi with a couple of decent lenses and styled like a retro rangefinder. It's really good for quick lifestyle shots and street photography, plus the HD video on it is pretty sick for such a small camera.

3. Mamiya C220 - an old school medium format Twin Lens Reflex camera, which takes 120 film (the big square photos.) Taking photos with this is quite a slow process, but it's sharpness, shallow depth of field and special quality makes it perfect for portraits. I'm still getting used to it but the shot above was taken with the Mamiya.

4. Bencini Koroll II - pictured above, I picked up this little beauty at the car boot sale the other day. It takes the same square format film as the Mamiya but it splits them in two so you get kind of panoramics. Quality-wise I think it will be a bit dodge like a Holga, but hopefully quite special. Haven't seen the results yet so I'll let you know.

Now all I need is some waves to shoot. (in any county apart from Cornwall or Devon)

Monday, 19 April 2010

No Fly Zone

The silver lining on the Icelandic ashen clouds that are still calmly bringing the European airline industry to it's knees, was that on Sunday morning, instead pulling over in laybys to be sick all the way to Newcastle, I got to nurse my hangover from the sunny comfort of my neighbour's garden. The fact that the surfer who was going to be my Northern county guide was stuck overseas without a flight to get home, was the nail in the coffin to scoring a county on the East coast today. It's always a gamble pulling out of a trip, and the worst bit is checking the waves on the net when it comes to the day you were meant to be there. But sunrise today showed a slightly smaller than expected swell hitting the NE counties... fun, yes, and better than any surf down in Cornwall just now, but a shadow of it's true potential. So I was nudged into making a call, and if we get some swell hitting the UK in the next 2 weeks it will probably have been the right call, but only time will tell. In the meantime, here's a leftover sequence of an Oli shove-it from the Cornwall/Devon score.

Friday, 16 April 2010

Eastern Promise




hmmm... little chart shaping up for the East coast next week. Could be fun, but unfortunately I've got 2 problems; getting there without a car, and the surfer I want to shoot with being grounded in another country due to volcanic ash. Nothing's ever simple...

2 down... forty something to go


Went a bit quiet on the blog there whilst I tried to understand the techy possibilities for embedding this blog into the Wavelength site and keeping everything branded up. I didn't manage so for now I'm glad to say the blog is staying right here.

So in the last week or so I've been pretty busy on the County Limits project. Just in time for the mag deadline, I cruised up to Devon and met up with Oli Adams and Josh Hughes at a semi secret spot I'd never been to before. It was a pretty sick set up, a sucky right that had the odd barrel and good end section for airs. We were pretty lucky to score a bit of sunshine too. On the way back we stopped in at a left point break back in Kernow, which was pretty busy, rainy, but pumping.


I got the shots in and wrote up the first installment of County Limits for the next issue of Wavelength, which has now gone off to the printers so they can work their magic.

No rest for the wicked though. I've got a super tight deadline for the next issue already and only a couple of weeks to score the next county. With Cornwall and Devon done, the reliable, easy options have been used up... my phone a friend, ask the audience and 50:50 lifelines are spent, so from now on it's about adventure to whichever random spot might be working. Should be interesting.

Monday, 5 April 2010

Dying Swell

Against all predictions the swell actually looked like it was dropping last night, and in the end it was just too small at St Ives to do a proper shoot. There was still the odd set here and there, but not what I was expecting at all. The trouble is, that means today is no longer the massive day that we were all hoping for. The wind sounds strong against the windows and it's looking dark and cloudy out there, but the hunt for a decent wave continues anyway...

The Cornish Wobble


So after a few nearly charts for Wales, the North East and Somerset, and with a deadline for the next issue looming, I've gone for the supposedly easy option to kick off the Breaking Boundaries project... Cornwall. For all it's fickle faults, the one thing Cornwall has going for it surf-wise is consistency, and after a month long wave drought across Britain, a lumpy swell has turned up to save the day in Kernow. Saturday was a typically tricky call. Southerly winds going South Easterly, Easterly and then Northerly. I followed the wind around the coast, keeping my back to it, and the difficulty of making a call on the right place to go meant I lost a few surfers to other spots, but I ended up at a special little cove with a hell of a punch in it.

It wasn't exactly the gold I was after, but today has served up some more windy swell, so I'm off to St Ives now to see if I can get anything more interesting. The next few days should be interesting too... if a little wobbly.

Sunday, 4 April 2010

The Big Idea

Working at Wavelength, the longest running surf magazine in the UK, there is a lot of office banter and arguments about just how good the waves around the coastline of Britain get. One such discussion, this time about which British county had the best waves, got us thinking about how many coastal counties in Britain are actually surfable. A non-surfer would most likely name Cornwall as the prime shire for riding waves, whereas those of us who love this sport and have enjoyed waves in England, Scotland and Wales, would probably add Yorkshire, Caithness and Pembrokshire to that list... but is that it? I count 46 counties in Britain that have coastline, so surely most of those get swell that is surfable now and then?

Straight away I can foresee some counties that are unlikely to get much in the way of peeling waves, but this project, which has very quickly become something that I can't stop thinking about, is more of an investigation rather than a challenge... I want to know for certain that you can't surf in Cheshire.

So this blog is not only meant as a diary of my trips, successes and failures around the British coastline, but also, and more importantly, as a call out for help, advice and tip offs for when those rarer, surf-starved counties are about to start firing. If Anglesey is going to go nuts, I need to be there!