Yo, check the new site. I’m no internet/website officianado…but I just moved the site to ProjectTrident.org
Let me know if you like it or if you catch any errors…remember I’m NEW!
Keep it real!
Yo, check the new site. I’m no internet/website officianado…but I just moved the site to ProjectTrident.org
Let me know if you like it or if you catch any errors…remember I’m NEW!
Keep it real!

S.K.A.T.E. it up...and make the Active Team

Santa Cruz...Timeless
For those of you who dont know me, growing up in Southern California skateboarding is just natural. But I think something we all should focus on this week is skateboard graphics. The industry today is full of brand advertising and sponsorships…most of which all ties to the one thing that you shred the most and represents who you are…your DECK. There was more to the transitional design change of Skulls and Cross Bones to the Evil Cartoon and then ultimately to the art we see today.
When skateboarding became popular in in the 1980’s it was very “Thrasher” and followed the design conventions of punk and heavy metal. This was the the critical mass period. Then skateboarding went underground from the late 80’s to the mid nineties. This period is comparable to web 1.0 and 2.0. All the wannabes left and just the core die-hards stayed to define the next generation of brands that weren’t as concerned with the “skate or die” heritage.
Brands such as Blind, Droors, New Deal, Element and World Industries defined the new renaissance. Built with a ”For Skateboarders by Skateboarders” mentality. I look at 37signals as the perfect example of a web design company that was started during web 1.0 but then helped to redefine the industry during its resurgence of web 2.0. There are a ton of comparisons to draw upon there. For example DC SHOE CO USA was created by Ken Block and the original name was Droors Shoe Company.
To understand why the art work changed you have to understand the period of time that the renaissance took place. Big pants, graffiti, shaved heads, tiny wheels, no plastic guards, no pads. The renaissance was the street… the first time around it was about vert, dogtown and all of that.
The artwork took on a novelty look for a few reasons. It started by knocking off well known logos and putting them on t-shirts. Then they moved to making cartoons that looked harmless but if you looked closer they were more provocative. Just like web 2.0 they couldn’t have cared less about the trademarks they violated. World Industry was the prime example of how do do this successfully.
Then the late 1990′s broght about another change. Whether due to the influence of urban lifestyles or popular music, skateboarding took on the “Ghetto” look. New Brands like DC, Alphanumeric, and others were positioned to influence the urban style. This is where hiphop, skateboarding and athletics had combined into an entirely new look.
Then the need and dedication to continually evolve Zero, a brand that took on the original heavy metal look, long hair, tight jeans; a throw back to the origins of skateboarding. In essence, the exact opposite of “Ghetto” became “Hessian”. If you look up what that means it almost defines todays young skateboarder generation.
“An unclean individual who attempts to portray himself as hypermasculine. Predominant in 1980s U.S.A. Common traits include dirty mullet hairstyle, pathetic facial hair, tight fitting acid-washed jeans, black vintage metal tee (cut-off sleeves optional), and “ticking-timebomb” demeanor.”
Unfortunately since then skateboarding has hit critical mass again and will need to go underground to washout the brands that are just cashing in. It is funny how it started and ended up in the same place. Now these brands have expanded into lifestyle companies that sell at your local Macy’s Department Store. That is a clear indicator that something new and original will emerge again.
It’s interesting to ponder the next changes we’ll see, especially with the rise of politics, uncertain times and propaganda like imagery that has meaning and is socially conscious will grasp the minds of our youth. It’s possible that we’ll only see a slight modification, or complex transformations with a more militant or protest twist. I can say that in my short lifetime, this is the first time I have ever seen teenagers wear a picture of a president on their t-shirts… and that is a HUGE deal. It means that kids are looking for something to believe in…that the wish wash and NASCAR like branding of skateboarders isnt selling the the Skate Or Die culture and I assure you, brands will begin to reflect this idea soon.

Check out the first of a 5 part mini series interview at Transworld Skateboarding on Mike Blabec…DC’s photographer pressin his upcoming book. You can check the interview here and below are some snipits. It’s a very cool piece and gives an insider’s perspective of the skateboarding world as well as the role photography plays in the sport.
Mike Blabac has been shooting photos since the late 80′s, has been DC’s photographer since the late 90s, and now has a photo book due out soon that’s dedicated to a life’s work in skateboarding. Read on to see where he got his start, how he came up, and get a sneak peak and some of the iconic photos to be included in his book.
How did your book come about?
Two years ago Ken Block hit me up about it. At that point I’d been at DC for eight years and I’d been involved in so much stuff, whether it was Danny jumping the Great Wall or the Mega Ramp stuff, plus there is a lot of photos of people who are really important in the history of skateboarding—people like Anthony, Stevie, Smith and Colin. It’s an honor for me to be part of skateboarding and to do this book.
But this book is not going to be just DC riders.
No, that’s something that Ken didn’t want. It’s naturally going to be a DC thing because that’s what I’ve done for two thirds of my career, but he wanted the photos I shot of Kalis and Danny when I was a kid, plus all the Girl, S.F, and Mad Circle photos.
How did you get into skateboard photography?
I started skating in the mid 80′s and I was interested in photography and always intrigued by cameras as a kid. I’d shoot a whole roll of film trying to get one perfect photo. It didn’t really click with me until I started looking at skate mags—that was ’86/87. I had this uncle who knew about photography, so I’d dog-eared some pages and asked him, “How they did this and how they did that? Why was this so bright?” He explained to me what fill flash was and what a fisheye did. So then I was really intrigued, because not only do these guys get to see the best skateboarding, but they also get a chance to make all these awesome images. That’s the most important thing to me. If I get too old to hop a fence and end up doing commercial work… but that stuff doesn’t mean anything to me—when you’re looking through a Wired mag and you see a Sony ad, you don’t give a shit about it, but as a skater, when your flicking through a skateboarding magazine you do. Being able to shoot guys like Danny and for people to be stoked, then that means more to me than anything. I think that’s why we all do it.
When did you get your first break?
I moved to San Francisco at the beginning of ’94. I knew that there was a lot of skating going on at the time, but it wasn’t until I went to EMB and was like holly shit, there’s Mike Carroll, Jovantae [Turner], and Scott Johnston, all these guys. I didn’t even shoot photos, all I did was skate. I didn’t carry a camera ’cause I couldn’t skate. I ran out of money and started working at the GAP folding T-shirts at five o’clock in the morning—that was a little hard on me after partying all night. So Aaron Meza and Scott Johnston introduce me to Mike Carroll and Karl Watson, so fortunately I wasn’t one of the guys that [James] Kelch would clown. So gradually I became friends with those guys ,and Scott clued me in and was like, “Why don’t you shoot photos of skating?” I’d shot this Pure Wheels ad of him and got paid two-hundred bucks, which was way more than I was making at the GAP, so that’s when it all started. I knew some of the Deluxe dudes and would skate the DMV curbs with them, but it was Scott who helped me get a job helping out Justin Girard at Mad Circle—I worked for there for three years. They’ve always kept it real up there. Sometimes areas are hotter than others, and I was really lucky to be there and be friends with those guys. I got to see rad skating and got to skate every day. I didn’t have a car for four years, all day on the buses.
Would you say that L.A is now the forefront of skateboarding?
Yeah absolutely, it really is. I wish that I was up there more, but I’m down here, trying to put S.D on the map.
San Diego has had a great resurgence in the last couple of years?
Yeah, hopefully we can help it more. In L.A that’s where everyone is at, there’s a lot of companies up there too.
What’s the difference between working for a magazine and working for a shoe company?
It’s tough, when you work for a mag you can go out and shoot with whoever you want to shoot with, but with a company, love it or hate it, you have to deal with those ten dudes or how many guys are on the team. It’s good because you do get really close to the team dudes.
The DC skate team is still the core of it.
It started as a skate company and it doesn’t matter to me if they start a bowling team, skateboarding is still the number one thing at DC. I don’t care what anyone has to say. That means a lot to me. I still want to shoot ads and I still get a buzz when people like them—that means more to me than anything.
What does it take to be a good skateboard photographer?
Number one is that you have to be a really good photographer. I’ve learned a lot over the years and I’m still learning. Number two is that you have to have the patience of a saint, whether it’s dealing with the team or dealing with the people who are trying to stop you from skateboarding—those are two of the main traits you’re gonna need.
Whose work did you look up to while growing up?
Luke Ogden, Spike [Jones] and Grant [Briiain]. At that time in the 80s, they were doing cool shit—like Grant’s Miller pole cam shot was incredible. Those images made me want to do it. When I was a kid in Michigan I had no idea that things would work out like they did. I was shooting Bill Danforth at a demo and it was awesome.
Check out the rest of the 5 part interview at Transworld Skateboarding. I’ll keep posting links to the series and some more snipits because Mike has been around for A LONG time and this is a rare opportunity to get an inside look at photography and the skateboarding world.

Today, my first artist of the week is from Welsh named Michael Bosanko who has traded in his paintbrush for lights and a digital camera. Using only these tools, the 39-year-old artist creates light graffiti using five colored flashlights and by leaving his digital camera set for long exposure. I’m sure you have all seen the Sprint commercials with the Architecture in Helsinki song, but this is a form of graffiti that can be shared with the world without doing anything damaging or illegal.
To create these light effects Bosanko covers an ordinary household flashlight with acetate paper which allows him to bring different shades of the color spectrum into his art. As an abstract artist, Bosanko tries to incorporate a sense of the surreal into all of his photographs.
Here’s what Bosanko has to say about his work:
“I use my torches like an artist would use a paint brush. I employ an exposure that lasts from ten seconds to one hour and then try to let my art manage to create what I had imagined. What I feel I am trying to convey is a sense of an aesthetically pleasing shape that clearly does not belong in that particular place or area.”
Bosanko is causing waves in the photographic art-world and says he plans to take his light graffiti to exhibitions around the country and possibly internationally.
Check out his site here.