Posts Tagged ‘Kevin Du Toit’
PRO-X SUMMER SERIES – 6 & 7 MARCH 2010
To all you Extremists…
If you havent heard, Pro-X is going down in Cape Town.
On the 6th and 7th of March, riders from BMX, FMX, Wakeboarding, Skateboarding, Supercross and Trials will be flocking down to Cape Town to take part in the most Extreme event of the year!
To check out the event, click on the following link:
http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=271333169355&ref=ts
Pro-X Live, hosted by Complete Events (the guys who bring you Rocking the Daisies) will be mashing it up on the Saturday and Sunday nights, as well as extreme entertainment, loads of prizes to be won, competitions, expo’s, best trick -undoubtedly keeping you entertained the whole weekend.
Join the Pro-X facebook group @ http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?pid=11348935&op=1&o=global&view=global&subj=188539097750&id=736195112#!/group.php?gid=188539097750&ref=ts
Check out the Pro-X website to stay at the forefront http://www.pro-x.co.za
There is only one way out – FLAT OUT!
Go off in 2010 – signing out,
Kevin Du Toit
HEINSIGHT – RECOGNITION OF REALITIES AFTER ITS OCCURRENCE
I recently got to see some amazing pictures taken by a killer skateboard photographer Werner Lemprecht of Hein Kotze’ and I just had to catch up with him and see what makes him shred…
KDT: Hein Kotze’ can you tell us a little about yourself and your breakdown in the world of skateboarding?
HK: I guess it’s quite a cliché by now, but one day I saw a few of the older guys in my primary school flipping this huge (back then it seemed huge) 2-stair gap. I was super stoked, and used to sit there for hours even though nobody ever really landed it. After that day a few guys and me picked up a “Wasp” setup from Makro. This was the start of endless Fridays, running over into Saturdays, skating sessions. Nobody had cars, so we used to walk…and I mean WALK. Especially when Werner Lamprecht and me started skating together. Our regular Friday-spot (and closest) was about 4km from where we stayed (seemed like 100km, after having to climb a mountain of a street, to the top of one hill on your way back). Every single Friday we were in this guy’s yard skating the most perfect box and bank setup. Even after he had moved we would jump the gate and chill there the entire afternoon. Since then I couldn’t get over the feeling of landing a new trick, perfecting an old one, or getting excited over a new loading-bay filled with weeds that need cutting and surfaces in need of sweeping.
KDT: So, how was your summer? What did you get up to?
HK: It was EXCELLENT!
Had my first holiday for the entire year and caught up on some, really essential, habits; sleeping until 13h00, skating until 19h00, chilling with my girlfriend till 1 AM. Now that’s the life…ha-ha.
Oh yeah! We went to Margate for a week as well…that was rad.
We got some mad pics, made some new friends and forgot about the reality that is; “the working life”
Now that’s a holiday in its true form.
KDT: How do you manage to keep on top of your work when you spend so much time skating?
HK: My work IS skating…or anything that was influenced by it – if I look at it like that I will pretty much enjoy anything I do.
I must admit that 2009 was a mad-scramble of a year.
February I heard that my application for a bursary was denied, and thus ended my student life in one sentence. I had to find a job, had to start paying my own things etc. Crazy. I wanted to do photography.
I decided, as in skating, that it’s something you can pretty much learn by yourself (with some advice from others) - and thus started playing more with photography and design. Up to the point where, after only one year (and no qualification behind my name), my own business card says; photographer/graphic designer. And through it all skating has been one the main sources of new ideas/media/inspiration.
You’ll always find time to do what you like, as long as you on like what you do.
KDT: What’s the best way to go about becoming a good skateboarder?
HK: Depends on what your definition of “good” is I guess. To me it’s doing something as simple as a bs-180 off a ramp, landing it 100 times…and then, finally, landing it perfect. I’d like to think that a good skateboarder does it for himself.
KDT: What’s the best experience you’ve had while skateboarding?
HK: To many to count, to many stories to tell, to many great friends to mention all.
Recently: winning the game-of-skate at the Slip Skate Co launch event. It was the first contest I’ve ever entered, and I was surprisingly nervous. Me, Werner and two other guys were in the final. The game went on and JJ and me were the only survivors. That guy has got some mad style, and it was quite intimidating each time he made my tricks look effortless. We went on for, what seemed like, forever. The crowd was cheering each time someone set a mad trick, and freaked out even more when the opponent managed to equally nail it.
It was INSANE.
At the end I managed to land the most perfect nollie-bigspin-flip (one of those tricks you “have landed before”, but only hope to land as a last resort). Again JJ got insanely close to actually landing a trick you can see he has probably never tried before…but to no success. I was finally declared winner, and received my first “brand-new” deck in probably a year’s time. I was super stoked and equally brain-dead after planning what to do next every time JJ missed a set.
KDT: Your photography is awesome, what advice do you have about capturing that right moment?
HK: Again it’s about; if you’re doing what you love, it will come naturally.
Each moment is different, and each photo is opinion based. Werner and me will sometimes spend half an hour shooting a pic after finally agreeing on where we want it taken from, how the exposure must be etc. A very important thing is knowing your camera and lenses. Each one is different, and each one makes an image look different. In theory they must all work the same, but from my experience this is not the case at all. My settings/focal length etc. can be identical to Werner or Reuben’s, but you’ll still end up with three images that look completely different.
SLIP SKATE CO PRODUCT LAUNCH
Hey guys, just a reminder of the Slip product launch happening this saturday. Slip Skate Co will have a mini ramp comp and 12:00, a game of SKATE at 14:00, and best trick comp at 16:00.
Date: Saturday, January 16, 2010
Time: 12:00am – 5:00pm
Location: Cnr 9th & 11th Roads, Erand, Midrand
There are absolutely NO entry fees for any of the comps, and there will be prizes to be won in each of the comps.
They will also have all the new Slip Skate Co products available at the event to ensure that everybody can get their hands on our new product range, which you can see at http://www.slipskateco.com/products/decks.html.
This is truly going to be an awesome day filled with tons of good skating, and we look forward to seeing all of you there.
You can catch all the details of the event, inclduing directions on the event page here http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=239735100952&index=1
SLIP SKATEBOARDS – TAKING SA SK8BOARDING TO THE NEXT LEVEL
Author: Kevin Du Toit
I am so devoted to skateboarding in South Africa that having to wait in anticipation to hear back from Alwyn Van Niekerk (founder of Slip Skate Co.), so that SK8Africa could make the announcement about the NEW line of Slip Skateboard Decks, Trucks and Wheels was killing me. This is what I expect to see from SA Skaters, their own brands because nothing happens until somebody brands something, and who knows this better than the Americans.
Now South Africans like, Alwyn Van Niekerk, are building their own quality brand, Slip Skateboards, that carries with it a true persona, and the beliefs and experiences similar to those in the United States and that is why Slip Skateboards is rising to a new level. Slip Skateboard decks, trucks and wheels aren’t just another product – but a brand, and that is something to be proudly South African about.
KDT: Keeping at the forefront by checking in with Alwyn on the launch date of Slip Skate Co. new decks, trucks and wheel, also gave me the insight into Alwyn’s consistent message about the value in building a solid and strong brand;
ALWYN: While we were planning our next product range we realized that we had a great opportunity to build a strong brand for Slip Skate Co and it’s products. We started off by completely redesigning the official company logo to move away from the death and macabre feel of the first range, and to create a unique logo that better suits the overall feel and direction of the company.
When our designer, Hein Kotze, showed me the first version of the black & white barcoded logo I really didnt buy into it at all, as it was completely different from the initial ideas I had for our logo and the next range, but that logo quickly grew on all of us and it became our official company logo and ultimately set the tone for the designs for the entire product range.
“Branded” was the first deck design inspired by the new logo and it got an immediate “sick dude!” reaction all round. The black & white colours and deck-sized logo has a minimalistic boldness that just completely gets in your face while looking great as well.
“Aspire” was the next piece of sheer genius from Hein. When we initially chatted about it I really pictured something completely different, but that design really just speaks volumes when you look at it. Once again the black & white colour scheme really sets it apart from anything else out there, and those hands…
“Razed” was to be something completely different from Branded and Aspire. It has such an unexpected natural balance brought about by the centerpiece logo with the chaotic, hard lines on the nose and the smooth, curvy trails coming off the company name onto the tail of the deck.
We reused the barcode logo on the wheels and truck designs in a discreet, complimentary manner that wouldn’t detract from the awesome deck decsigns, while still fulfilling our branding requirements.
The vision with this product range was to establish Slip Skate Co as a strong brand in the SA skating industry with some of the most innovative and creative designs to compliment the proven quality of our products. We really feel that we’ve created a complete product range which is not only awesome enough to stick on your wall as a design masterpiece, but also has all the hardcore qualities skaters demand.
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Now that is what I’m talking about, Alwyn has set the standards high for Slip Skate Co and created quality with excellence. Slip Skate Co has also kicked up the website a notch @ http://slipskateco.com/
Slip Skate Co product pricing:
Decks (incl grip) R 300
Wheels (53mm 100A) R 120 per set
Bearings (ABEC 7) R 60 a set
Trucks R 200 a set
Completes R 650
They deliver anywhere in South Africa





