Vans x Duke Kahanamoku - Preview

May 31st, 2007  |  Published in Sneakers

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Voici un aperçu d’une prochaine sortie de chez Vans grâce à Thomas Giorgetti.

Vans Vault sort une chaussure pour rendre hommage à Duke Kahanamoku, père du surf moderne. Elles sont dans un jolie imprimé rouge au motif floral typiquement hawaïen, mais malheureusement, elles sont prévues pour la collection Automne 2007, weird, isn’t it?

Voir la suite pour plus de renseignements et de photos…

Duke Kahanamoku - The Father of Modern Surfing

Duke was born in Honolulu, Oahu in 1890. A full-blooded Hawaiian, he was raised in Waikiki on the site of where the Hilton Hawaiian Village Hotel is today. He began surfing in 1900. At that time, 28% of the Hawaiian people lived at Honolulu/ Waikiki because of a shift of population from the Kona Coast of the big island. This brought the heart of the ancient art of surfing to the southern coast of Oahu.

By 1905, surfing had returned to its infancy with a few natives and whites still riding old plank-boards that they happened to have. Most were about 6′ long, 20″ wide, and 1″ thick. At Waikiki only a handful of surfers would be seen in the surf at any one time.

The techniques of wave riding had regressed significantly since ancient times. Surfing was now done close to the shore on smaller, breaking waves. Most rode straight off instead of angling across the wave. One would simply stand up, not moving, and go straight to the beach. The whole pastime was unelaborated and practiced only by very few.

In 1910, Duke introduced a new surfboard that was 10′ long, 23″ wide, 3″ thick and weighed 70 pounds. This surfboard was made of California redwood. With this surfboard, Duke was able to ride across the larger outside waves and was the first to introduce tandem surfing to Waikiki.

In 1912, after winning an Olympic swimming competition in Europe, he made and rode the first surfboard on the east coast of the United States in Atlantic City. Duke was invited to Australia by the New South Wales Swimming Association in 1914 after breaking his own world record 100-yard swim in Sydney.

He spent Christmas with friends at Freshwater Beach. There he was given a plank of sugar pine wood. Using an adz he shaped a surfboard that was slightly concaved, roughed the nose and tapered a squared-off tail. This surfboard measured 9′ long, 2′ wide and 3″ thick. He surfed this surfboard at Freshwater on December 24, 1914.
bio/infos : surfmuseum.org

Picture story : Duke Kahanamoku and the Waikiki “Beachboys” at the Outrigger Canoe Club, Waikiki, Hawaii, 1963. From the cover to Duke Kahanamoku Presents: A Beachboy Party

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