Showing posts with label Weston Colton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Weston Colton. Show all posts

Monday, February 29, 2016

Behind the Photo: Forrest Huber Slug Mag Photo Feature Issue 325 - January 2016

Forrest Huber recently had a great photo feature in the January Issue of SLUG Magazine. Very reminiscent of an old Kerry Getz or Ricky Oyola Ollie photo from the 90's/early 2000's. While the spots don't always change, the eyes in which they are viewed through do. As a result of Weston's vision, and Forrest skating, this photo came together perfectly. This was just the tail end of an amazing day skating downtown. Here's a collection of other photographs that Weston Colton shot throughout the day.

Forrest Huber: Ollie over the rail down both sets

Glenn Calvert: BS Smith

Sam Milianta, Glenn Calvert, and Niels Jensen 

Forrest Huber: BS Nosegrind Popout

 Niels Jensen, Sam Milianta, and Jovi Bathemess


Jovi Bathemess: Switch BS Crook

Jovi Bathemess: Switch Front Crook

Forrest Huber: 360 Flip

Forrest Huber: Wallride Nollie Out over the Pole

and we're out

Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Five 5's: Tyler Braithwaite

Straight outta' Provo, Tyler Braithwaite is the newest BC Sandy rider.
Photos: Weston Colton

Kickflip Foot Plant

1. Top 5 Skate Videos:

2. Top 5 Skate Styles:

                                     Wallie Backside 180

3. Top 5 Places to Skate:
The Teen Center (rip)
SLC Library
Center Street in Provo
9th and 9th
Any smooth flatground

4. Skate Homies:
Tyler Winn
Ben Boutelle
James Henrie
Parker Garrett
Finn Christensen


5. Top 5 Things About Working at Firehouse Subs:
Free Sandwiches
S'mores Brownies
It pays the bills
Tyler Winn
James Henrie

Sunday, March 23, 2014

SLUG Magazine Photo Feature: Eric Nguyen

Check out Eric (Chi) in the March 2014 Issue of SLUG Magazine.
By: Weston Colton

Eric Nguyen: Heelflip - SLC, UT

"Last June, I went out shooting with Eric for the first time. Actually, I think it was the first time we had even met. We found this nice gap Downtown and Eric got right to it, throwing switch heelflips. After a handful of tries, he landed on one and slid out, dislocating his shoulder in the process. We ended up at an urgent care to get it set. Seven months later, we found ourselves at another gap, just blocks from the first. This time he had more favorable results, landing not one, but two heelflips over the rail. Thanks for that second heelflip, Eric."

Thursday, January 30, 2014

Popeye Magazine (Japan): Sam Milianta Article

Our man, Sam Milianta, recently had an amazing article in No. 802 of Popeye Magazine out of Japan. The article is full of awesome Salt Lake City skateboarders and BC Sandy team riders. Below are some photos that did, and did not make it into the article.
Photos: Sam Milianta

Popeye No 802 Cover

Salt Lake Article

 Jeffrey Delbert

Jeffrey Delbert, Ollie from Street

Jovi Bathemess

Jovi Bathemess, Switch Crook

 Sean Winskowski

Forrest Huber

Forrest Huber, Suski Grind

 Garrison Conklin

Saturday, January 4, 2014

SLUG Magazine Photo Feature: Garrison Conklin

Check out Garrison in the January 2014 Issue of SLUG Magazine.
By: Weston Colton

Garrison Conklin: Ollie From Bump to Flat - SLC, UT

"The ollie is the foundation of almost every trick on a skateboard. When you are just learning to skate, you practice ollie-ing up curbs, over soda cans, a deck on its side, a manhole cover, off a picnic table and down stairs. You are always trying to go higher, longer, faster—and it feels amazing. Some people just have unbelievable power and finesse in their ollies. Garrison is one of those guys. I would have been happy with an ollie from curb cut to curb cut here, but Garrison saw the challenge to clear the whole driveway to the flat on the other side, and went for it. I’m sure it felt just as great as the first time he ollied up a curb."

Also make sure to check out Garrison's blog for some amazing photos here.

Thursday, July 4, 2013

"Forrest Does Downtown" Outtakes

Here is a couple of photo's that didn't make it into the mag. Both photo's are from the first of two days shooting for this article.

BS 50-50. Photo: Weston Colton

This angle definitely shows how gnarly the spot is. Unfortunately it is kind of hard to tell exactly where he is coming from so it was decided to use the other angle for the article.

FS 180. Photo: Weston Colton

Forrest warmed up with this FS 180 and must have done it at least 20 times. The cover shows this spot with everything above the sidewalk removed from the photo for a clean cover. I like this one because it captures downtown quite well.

Thursday, June 27, 2013

Forrest Huber: "Forrest Does Downtown" in the June SLUG Magazine

Here is Forrest's cover, and article from the June issue of SLUG Magazine.
Photos: Weston Colton
Words: Weston Colton, Sam Milianta, and Jovi Bathemess


For this article, Forrest Huber, Jovi Bathemess, Sam Milianta, Gabe Dusserre and I met up near the library Downtown. We parked our cars, and set off on our boards to skate and shoot spontaneously––organically, if you will. While Forrest is the focus of this piece, I think it is important to note that we were rolling as a small group of friends. The friendly dynamic and atmosphere that was created helped some of these tricks come to life. These photos were all shot on two Saturdays in downtown Salt Lake City. We didn’t get all the photos we wanted to––sometimes a spot gets the best of you, sometimes you get kicked out before you even get a chance to skate––but we had fun, and that is all that really matters.
                               

“I really got to know Forrest Huber about two years ago when it was decided that he was going to start working at BC [Surf and Sport] Sandy. It was immediately apparent that he has a great energy about him, is outgoing and up for any task at hand. Those qualities that make him a great employee also make him an amazing skateboarder. Since he started working at BC, we have become great friends. Whether it’s a trip to Vegas (where he had to get his picture taken with every street performer), skating Downtown as he’s blasting over every fire hydrant, or selling skate product, he has the ability to make everything more fun with his contagious, high energy. His ability to push himself and try new things also helps motivate everyone around him. Forrest skates for BC Surf & Sport, Toy Machine, Bro Style, Pig Wheels and Dekline footwear.” –Jovi Bathemess


The ollie is the foundation of nearly every trick in skateboarding. Forrest finished off the second Saturday with this Trolley Square bar hop on the edge of Downtown


I’ve always loved wall rides––they remind me of Natas and Mark Gonzales from the first skate magazines I ever read in 1990. With timeless style, Forrest easily handles this high-to-low wallride.


This is the one exception where we left Downtown. We drove up to the University of Utah to skate this bump to bar. Forrest got an ollie and this frontside 180 before the campus police rolled up on us and put a stop to the session. That ended the day, and we headed to Este for some pizza.



Forrest, backside 50-50. “When street skating finally became an acceptable form of skateboarding, skaters started to venture away from the backyard ramps and mall parking lots of the suburbs and into the city. Spots began to consist of alleys, hydrants, metal loading docks and every other inch of Downtown. Forrest is the embodiment of this. There are no real spots or lines. The entire street is the spot, and what happens between stoplights is the line.” –Sam Milianta


 

The super-smooth concrete at skateparks has made us all soft. Street skating brings all sorts of challenges to getting a trick. Rocks, cracks and scantily-clad club girls in the alley were all obstacles Forrest dealt with when he did this frontside 50-50 transfer into the bank.



Downtown is constantly growing and evolving. New spots are popping up all the time, sometimes only for a few days. Other spots have been around for years, but haven’t been skateable for one reason or another. If you keep your eyes open, you might find some new concrete has been poured, and suddenly, that rail you’ve looked at forever is perfect for this feeble transfer into a driveway bomb.


I think Chong did a manual off these ledges back in a ’90s Dirty Hessian video—Deth or Stigmata, I believe. It’s likely that Chong skated these ledges before Forrest was born. I love the look on kids’ faces when I tell them that Mark White kickflipped the IBM stairs over 15 years ago, or that there used to be a handrail down the middle and DJ Chavez boardslid it with huge, soft wheels. Downtown has a rich history of skating. It’s quite possible that this sandstone ledge has been 5-0’d before, but that’s not important. Forrest had never done it before. You just hit spots and then move on before you get kicked out.



Forrest, backside 180 nosegrind. “We live in Utah, home of the greatest snow on Earth. Snow just happens to be an enemy of the skateboard, so, to adapt, most of us have become accustomed to skating garages and indoor spots. At this point, it’s just another way that street skating has had to adapt over the years.” –Sam Milianta

"Skateboarding downtown has a lot to offer that can't really be found elsewhere. For me it's the spontaneous nature of it that makes it so enjoyable. You never really who you are going to see, the traffic you will have to deal with, or what you are going to skate. Generally all that is really known is the starting point because downtown lends itself to be one big skate spot. Why pick a single spot to drive to, or confine yourself to the controlled environment of the skatepark, when you can fully utilize the freedom that skateboarding is intended to give you when skating downtown?" -Jovi Bathemess

Check out the full issue here.

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Photo Thursday: Jovi Bathemess

Switch Crook to Regular. Photo: Weston Colton

Switch Ollie. Photo: Weston Colton

Check out more of Weston's amazing skate photos here.

Saturday, December 8, 2012

SLUG Magazine Photo Feature: Jovi Bathemess

Check out Jovi in the December issue of SLUG Magazine.
Words: Weston Colton

[Photo: Weston Colton]

"When I think about what draws me to certain skaters, the two biggest factors are style and trick selection. That’s what makes the greats stand out. Just look at Gonz, Gino, Puleo and Dill. These guys have done their share of gnarly skating, but what makes them interesting and fun to watch is the creativity in what they skate and how good they look doing it. That is what makes Jovi so fun to shoot. He has an East Coast style and a knack for interesting spots. This is a perfect example."

Jovi Bathemess – Switch Wall Ride – Salt Lake City, Utah

For more from the December issue of SLUG Magazine go here.

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

SLUG Magazine Photo Feature: Matt Winskowski

Check out Matt in the October Issue of SLUG Magazine.
Words by: Weston Colton

[Photo: Weston Colton]

"The boneless one is a trick I have always liked doing. It’s a classic trick that’s all about style. It was also the second trick I ever learned (it was much more common in 1990). I told Matt that I wanted to shoot a boneless at a street spot. Matt’s response: “What would Peter Hewitt do?” Apparently, he would do something like this."

Matt Winskowski, boneless, SLC

For more from the October Issue of SLUG go here.

Thursday, May 31, 2012

Photo Thursday: Garrison Conklin

You may recall seeing a video of this in the Photo Profile article on Weston Colton.
The photo turned out really rad!

Photo: Weston Colton

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

"Les Enfants Terribles" point and shoot show


Friends, and constant contributors to the blog, Samuel Milianta, Weston Colton, and Adam Dorobiala will have photos in this show. Make sure to check it out!

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Weston Colton, Photo Profile on Fuel TV

Check out this really rad profile on BC friend, Weston Colton. The Profile is awesome and follows Weston around as he photograph's Garrison Conklin. You even see a photo of Glenn Calvert and former BC rider Micah Wood.


Thursday, April 21, 2011

Weston Colton's Type 59 Project

Here are some photos featuring Glenn Calvert and Jovi Bathemess from a series of skateboarding photos Weston Colton shot using Polaroid Type 59 film with a 4x5 camera.

Glenn Calvert - crooked grind

Jovi Bathemess - thread the needle nollie back lip

Check more of the photos featuring David Law, Devin York, and Holland Redd, and an explanation of the costs and process on Weston's blog.

Also, check out more of Weston's photos on his website.