EDITIONS

North American | European

Mat Arney hooks up with some old friends to go feral on the Arabian Peninsula and hunt down some truly isolated swell. Words & photos: Mat Arney

God Went Surfing with The Devil is a film by Alex Klein, which documents the war-torn region of Gaza. At a time when tensions are high, this film investigates the attitudes and aspirations of a small pocket of people where surfing removes socio-political divisions and lets the ocean carry their aspirations for peace.

A tale of surfing reefs in South Africa, but not knowing what you get yourself into. Drift contributor Tim Conibear points a finger at localism and finds three more pointing right back. Photos: Mike Reich

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

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

From Gerry Lopez to machine shaping and the retro scene, Tim Stafford chews the fat with UK surf veteran - and mighty leader of the Foam Asylum - Nigel Semmens


Dirty fingers

March 10, 2010 | Words By: Angela

kookMy copy of The KooK arrived this morning. Never has our grumpy postman been such a welcome visitor. Thanks to Dan Crockett and friends, instead of red bills I got a pink paper. Lush!

It’s like getting back to the old school: way before the internet and fancy shit like PDFs, when print magazines were king, we used to check over four layers of film, and – if we were lucky – we could scratch off (some of) our mistakes. The KooK seems to tap into something further back still, when newspapers were trusted and treasured purveyors of information instead of today’s throwaway tabloid tat.

It’s a quirky mix of photography, design and words, shunning easy categorisation in favour of something unique, personal and occasionally downright weird. Extra-ordinary? Expect nothing less.

kook3But don’t take my word for it – support the innovation, the effort, the people who buck the norm and who have poured their hearts into making something that refuses to conform and is all the better for it – by buying a copy direct from Mr Crockett himself. It’s cheaper than a pint and lasts longer.

And – hail the modern miracle – there’s actually not a smudge of newsprint on these fingers. How times have changed…


3 Comments


  1. Looks interesting…buying one now…

    1
  2. finally got my own inky fingers on this piece of tomorrow’s chip paper, and it is truly wholesome. if you were ever into music/scene zines when you were younger (remember ‘surf’s up’) you should like this- a ‘professional’ look and quality writing of a mag/journal but with the DIY and enthusiasm ethos of a zine. spot on & i’m proud to be in there. looking forward to K#2 sometime not v.soon.

    2
  3. Got a copy, great read, love it.

    3


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