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“I'm not interested in formulae when it comes to surfing and art.” Ryan Lovelace talks to Chris Preston about trusting your eyes, hands, and feet, and adding another leaf to the weird-hull-alternative-vibe-tree. Photos: Morgan Maasen, Brandon DiPierri & Ryan Lovelace

A shaper with a real passion for his craft, Tyler Hatzikian has consistently refused to compromise the quality or the integrity of his work in order to make a quick buck. He talked to Drift about nose-riding, refining longboard design and his reluctance to take the limelight. Words & photos: Jamie Bott

Chris Preston chats to longboard maestro Steve Walden about his disappointment with the lack of recognition for the longboarding scene, what makes the Magic model magic, and working with GSI. Photos: Jamie Bott

They're trained to defend their country and protect our freedom and liberty, but when active service is over, many soldiers find themselves struggling with personal and mental problems that the army just doesn't want to know about. Could surfing provide some answers? Words & photos: Russ Pierre

Using locally sourced timber and having designed a manufacturing process that minimises waste, Mike LaVecchia of Grain Surfboards has cornered the market in beautiful, sustainable wooden boards. And the best bit? They ride like a dream. Photos: Nick LaVecchia

Bing Copeland was a pioneer of the modern surf industry. In his excellent new retrospective, ‘Bing Surfboards – Fifty Years of Craftsmanship and Innovation’, Paul Holmes discovered what makes Bing tick. Words: Bing Copeland & Paul Holmes Photos: Courtesy of Bing Copeland

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S.M.A.S.H. @ Wallako

September 25, 2009 | Words By: Niega

smash-wallako-openerWallako is a cool surf shop. And I mean cool in a good sense: it’s managed and tended by a nice crew of real surfers, and it specialises in beautifully handcrafted boards by some great shapers whose work was almost unavailable until now around here (DVS, Neal Purchase Jr., etc. ).

Next to the boards they also display a lean -but healthy and classy- range of surfwear from selected brands, and a stylish homemade decoration to make many a San Franciscan mussel or a Brooklyn squid green with envy (get it? click on the links if you don’t). Besides it is in Bidart, the only other place in the French Basque Country (apart from Guéthary) where I’d care to live. I have only heard of one other shop like this in Southern Europe, Florian’s The Flying Longboarder in Comillas (Cantabria), and so it was with sadness that I learned a few days ago that it is about to close down. Shame.

The guys at Wallako (who don’t even know of my existence, by the way, in case you think that this is some sort of plug) also make an effort to display exhibitions of local artists. This is the case of Rudy Jacques, a French photographer from l’Île d’Oléron and the man behind the Avthentic blog. Rudy is also a filmmaker, and his Things short film reached the Final of the Surf Short Film Competition within the AMSTEL Surfilm Festibal7 held in Donostia this past June.

The photography exhibition –S.M.A.S.H.- will open this coming Saturday 26 September @ 19:00 h. and Rudy, who lives in Paris now, will be there to greet you. Do not miss it if you are around.

smash-wallako

Wallako Surfshop
111 avenue de Biarritz, 64210 Bidart

Niegà

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