ACE CAFE RADIO

    mardi 11 février 2014

    Behind the lens with Thomas Van Rooij


    1989-Amsterdam: AutoRAI security guards allow a kid to stand beside a Ferrari F40, with his hands behind his back. A petrolhead is born. We ask long-time crankandpiston.com devotee Thomas Van Rooij about his work and what it’s like behind the lens.
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    Why don’t you start off by talking us through your camera…
    Well I still use my Nikon D90 for all my photography. More and more publications are swapping to digital, so a lot of my work involves high quality images for use on websites and through social media channels. Actually, with a lot of my clients, I really don’t need a lot of megapixels as all my images will be resized for internet usage anyway.
    Is that the only reason then that you’ve decided against upgrading your equipment? How the industry works now…?
    No, not really. A lot of people ask me what camera I use, as if the secret of taking good photos lays there(!),but in the end it’s always the photographer that captures the images and not his camera: it’s like telling an author he has to use a particular typewriter. Me? I use a Nikon D90 and a 18-105mm lens, and that’s fine because I tend to know what I want to create before picking the camera. I see a lot of people upgrading their gear thinking that it will make them better photographers, but I think the opposite might be true sometimes.
    That being said I would like to upgrade my D90 in the near future: I bought my trusted Nikon back in 2009. I’m still a student at the moment though, so although full frame cameras are getting cheaper, they’re still a little out of my price range.
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    Has it dinted the reaction to your work?
    The best feeling, for me, is when people tell me I inspire them to follow a similar path. It’s really humbling to do what you love doing only to hear that others like your work and see you as an inspiration.
    Was there a particular photographer that inspired you to get started?
    I started taking pictures of cars in 2009: there or thereabouts. There was a set of images I loved of a Lamborghini Murciélago LP670-4 SV by a chap called Webb Bland of NotBland Photography. After a while my work started to improve and it began to attract some attention. One image in particular attracted Webb’s attention, and we spoke several times on Facebook about my work. He was really enthusiastic, and that felt so great. There’s no better feeling than creating something all by yourself and seeing positive reaction from clients and fans.
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    One thing crankandpiston finds particularly interesting is your methods: you don’t hide how you shape a photograph unlike a lot of other photographers. Aren’t you nervous someone could copy your ideas?
    I’m a strong believer in treating people the way you want them to treat you. I’m a self-taught photographer, in that I’ve never had any education in photography or graphic software: I haven’t even opened the manual of my Nikon! I’ve had help from some great names in the trade after they noticed my work, which helped me to improve even further, and I think others deserve the same attention.
    You mentioned though that the photographer creates the image, not the camera…
    True. It’s hard to give people insight into how I see the world myself. If you’re out to copy my work – which would be waste of time for any self-respecting artist in the first place – you can figure out my knowledge and skills, but the artist is hidden between your ears and not in the gear.
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    Speaking of  ‘gear’, do you believe Photoshop is essential to a good photograph?
    I’ve seen the same discussions online: no, Photoshop isn’t essential. But in commercial photography, post-production plays a very important roll. In my opinion, photography is art and the photographer is free to use whatever tool he can think of to create his images. But I also think people are unaware how much photography has evolved. Back in the day, editing photos happened in the darkroom. Not many people who participate in the discussion seem to know though that even then backgrounds where replaced and scenes where altered. It was a precarious job of cutting and pasting negatives so the scene blended as a whole, so the idea is pretty similar to Photoshop.
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    With that in mind, do you do what you do for the sake of professionalism or is it just down to personal enthusiasm?
    I think the beauty of doing what you love is that the line between person and professional is very thin. I handle my photography and business the same way I handle my personal life. When a client asks me to do a job, and I think he should do something a little different to achieve a better goal, I don’t hesitate to tell him that: we spend hours on location with clients who don’t realise that taking one picture can take up to half an hour sometimes. Plus I often talk to people from all over the world who might be able to create that little extra exposure of our work. So being a successful photographer is like being a good friend sometimes: you have to be honest, open and a good listener.
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    Let’s look to the future. What haven’t you achieved with your work and what would you like to?
    Wow, this is a difficult one! I really don’t have a bucket list besides just doing what I love for as long as I love it. At the moment I’m occupied with achieving personal goals like finishing school and planning my career. Where I live it’s very hard to make your living from photography alone: almost every kid has a camera and offers to shoot for free. Many companies don’t see the value in quality work and go with the cheap option, sadly. In the long run – like every automotive photographer I guess – I’d like to work with major brands. Being part of a team and putting together the press release for a new model would be a real thrill. I don’t think I’m any closer right now, but as a photographer you never stop learning and you’ll always find ways to get even better.
    - Shots courtesy of Thomas Van Rooij

    échappement

    lundi 10 février 2014

    Troisième succès de rang pour Toni Bou


    Les trialistes Espagnols ont une fois de plus monopolisé le podium, cette fois dans le cadre du Palais San Jordi de Barcelone où se disputait la troisième épreuve du championnat du Monde de Trial Indoor. Champion en titre et dominateur des deux épreuves précédentes, Toni Bou n’a laissé aucune chance à ses rivaux, une fois de plus !
    Comptant désormais 21 points d’avance au championnat sur son plus proche rival, Toni Bou peut voir venir les choses avec d’autant plus de sérénité qu’il a surclassé tous ses rivaux à Barcelone !
    S’imposant en qualification avec huit points de moins que son dauphin Albert Cabestany (Sherco Michelin), puis en demi finale avec neuf points de moins qu’Adam Raga (Gas Gas Michelin), le champion en titre a enfoncé le clou en finale où il ne concède qu’un petit point alors que ses poursuivants en comptabilisent neuf (Raga) ou quinze (Cabestany et James Dabill)! Seul pilote à ne pas connaître le moindre échec de la soirée, Toni Bou abordera les deux dernières épreuves du championnat (Milan le 15 mars et Madrid le 28 mars) en position de force.
    Résultats : 1.Bou (ESP, Montesa Michelin), 1 pt ; 2.Raga (ESP, Gas Gas Michelin), 9 ; 3.Cabestany (ESP, Sherco Michelin), 15 ; 4.Dabill (GBR, Beta), 15 ; 5.Fajardo (ESP, Beta Michelin), 15 ; 6.Fujinami (JAP, Montesa Michelin), 16 ; etc….
    Positions au championnat : 1.Bou, 60pts ; 2.Cabestany, 39 ; 3.Raga, 36 ; 4.Fajardo, 29 ; 5.Dabill, 23 ; 6.Fujinami, 19 ; etc…

    Triumph T25 Blazer SS – Tredici Custom Castings


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    Most of us will start a custom bike build with a genre, fashion or style in mind. You might want something that oozes classic café racer. Or maybe you’re thinking of a creation in a brat style with a touch of tracker thrown in for good luck. Hell, if you’re anything like me you’re probably planning the colour of the brake leads before you’ve even got a bike. But few of us have the skills or courage to just trust in your love of metal, your passion for bikes and your creativity and simply let the build happen. Which is exactly what Gian from France’s Tredici Custom Castings did. Meet his very groovy ‘Black Smoker’ Triumph.
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    “My name is Gianluca Curulla. I’m 33 and my parents were South Italian immigrants, so I live in North East France where all the French iron and steel industries are. I’m a blacksmith and a metal founder and until recently I was a foundry teacher. My hobbies have always been metal, music and motos. I’m a drummer in grind-core and doom bands, doing recordings and thousands of gigs and tours all over Europe. I also love mountain bikes and bmx; most weekends i’ll be eating dust and breaking my shoulders somewhere or other.”
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    “Clients payed me with bottles of Islay whiskey or bikes parts, sometimes weed”
    “I have always lightened and customised my bikes. As a huge addict of drag, hot rods and all types of motor freaking, I’m always putting all those non-sense accessories and plastics in the bin to keep things light to handle and roll. With my first pay cheque I got my motorcycle licence and bought my first ‘real’ motorcycle. It was a Honda 500 four and since then I’ve had only 70′s bikes – mostly Hondas. I always repaired and built bikes and cycles. Sometimes for friends and for free, doing cast parts at my foundry for old-timers or race bikes. I never got a shop or a real business going; the clients payed me with bottles of Islay whiskey or bikes parts… and sometimes weed.”
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    “So now, pushed by my friends and family, I’m running Tredici Custom Castings, and I specialise in casts and forged parts for bikes. This little Triumph is my first ‘official’ build, but I’ve got other bike projects going on in my garage, too. But this bike is kind of a living portfolio of my work.”
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    “I really believe in this stuff. The real things you can touch. I’ve got no Facebook, no Twitter, no nothing except the shop and my poor blog. Soon I’ll open an online store, with lots of parts. I’m kind of discrete person, but I have a good amount of part orders. It’s great ’cause that’s I really want to do. More parts and more bikes, and maybe even make a living with it. That’s my dream, man.”
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    “I started the build with a ultra-beat up and non-running Triumph T25 Blazer SS (Street Scrambler). I was able to buy this bike cheap as it was pretty much junk. Non-running motor, bent and cracked swingarm, missing or broken parts. But with street legal papers! It’s not street legal in this guise, but I have hidden wiring and quick connectors for headlights, licence plate illumination and the rest.”
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    “I lowered the forks by 8cm front and rear, put on some Hagon shocks, an Avon 19″ front and a Dunlop K81 18″ rear. The one-off aluminium parts I cast are the mudguard, saddle, primary cover, timer cover, rear drum plate, exhaust ‘salt lake style’ pipe cap, footpegs and the front fairing.”
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    “The gas tank is from a 70′s Batavus moped; I used some bass drum tensioners to fasten the mudguard and saddle, and old butterfly nuts from 40′s bicycles. The stand is made from the leaf spring suspension of an English MG car and a drag z-bar. All the rest is raw metal which has been hand fabricated and drilled. The only color luxury I permitted myself was to put a light layer of matt black on the frame only to de-paint it with acetone to bring up an authentic 40 year-old look.”
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    “It runs like a beast now and weighs exactly 103kg with a tank full of gas. There’s 28hp to play with, and the saddle is really comfortable. The leather was professionally made, and it’s the only part of the bike I didn’t do myself. The photos you see here where taken near the last remains of an old steel mill from when I was a kid. It’s now a green park where old people walk the dog on a Sunday. I hope you enjoy them.”
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    [Photos by Hugo Chevalier]
    via PIPEBURN