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Phil Gallagher & Co. Project

  • doclach
    August 2009
    Over at his house the other week, Aussie boog photog Phil Gallagher mentioned this project. He's just sent me this vimeo clip edited together by Jake Stone:

    http://vimeo.com/5887994

    the mag is due for release in September through the website:
    http://www.leboogie.com/

    Now you know as much as me.. haha... as usual with Phil's prjects - it will be rad.

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14 Replies

  • Scarecrow
    August 2009
    Looks sick. Wonder if it'll be affordable for us Saffas??
  • doclach
    August 2009
    ^^ yeah, i hope so Scarecrow. Toinzy is a pretty reasonable fella, so hoping it is gonna be good in that respect. He takes stuff like that into account.

    The postage is the killah, I just sent some mags to a mate in the States and the postage was ridiculous from here. Another mate i sent Phil's coffee table booger book to overseas and the postage was more than the book!

    I'll keep this up to speed as i find gear out, if that is cool then.
    great to have such awesome talent manifesting in the BB world aye.
  • lyle
    August 2009
    gotta love phil's work! so sweet! 8)
  • Scarecrow
    August 2009
    doclach wrote:
    ^^ yeah, i hope so Scarecrow. Toinzy is a pretty reasonable fella, so hoping it is gonna be good in that respect. He takes stuff like that into account.

    The postage is the killah, I just sent some mags to a mate in the States and the postage was ridiculous from here. Another mate i sent Phil's coffee table booger book to overseas and the postage was more than the book!

    I'll keep this up to speed as i find gear out, if that is cool then.
    great to have such awesome talent manifesting in the BB world aye.

    Dude where can I find out more about the book? Suppliers, etc?? Very keen to check it out!!
  • iammonster
    August 2009
    oooooh cant wait to get my mits on this!!
  • doclach
    August 2009
    Hey Scarecrow,

    the coffee table book is called "DLUX" . Phil put it out late last year. It's only available through him directly via his online store. I just wrote and asked him if he has any left for SA:
    Quote:
    "let him know just to select SA when he makes an order online through my store.
    Got some copies left."

    if you goto:
    http://www.philgallagher.com/

    and click on the "shop" logo you'll be able to sort it from there. they're on reduced price now too.

    as for a review of the book - I asked for one for my birthday last year and stoked. I also just got a mail back overnight from a mate who i gifted it to, this excerpt pretty much says it all:
    "Howzit braddah Doc,
    I got the package you sent, frikin so killer!! Every photo in that book is unreal!! It is something I will pass along to my son eventually and on and on....."


    Quality stuff like this puts booger in a proud place and reps our sport bigtime IMO
  • Spy Dude
    August 2009
    Saw a latest Riptide mag in the CNA down the road, looked epic, rad photos, then i saw the price.. R178.00 Dropped it like a hot potatoe. Fuck man, its more expensive that Euro Vouge! Are you kidding me??? R178.00 for a magazine... that kills tree's. FORGET ABOUT IT!
  • Scarecrow
    August 2009
    Phaaark! Epic price for the book!!! Was soooooo stoked and then I checked the shipping cost to SA :x :x Almost double the cost of the book itself. Frikkin bummed I got no family living in Oz. So want a copy of that book man!
  • doclach
    August 2009
    Spy dude, riptide out here on the newsagent shelf is Aus $8.95 which converts to 60 rand.

    i had a look at the subbies, which says:
    Rest/World 1 Year Subscription Aus $121.70 (816.10 rand)

    from what you've stated as prices there, postage is a killerrrrr

    I checked euro vogue here ( i dont normally look at that, and depending which country in europe it varies from Aus $16 (107 rand) to around $20 (134 Rand)


    Scarecrow - if it is any help, I could get a copy of Phil's DLUX book to Jerry before he returns to SA (even though we are officially kidnapping him so we can continue to watch his airs), if Jared has room in his baggage. If that sounds appealing, let me know and i'll contact big J and see if that is possible his end bru.

    Cheers,
    Doc
  • doclach
    August 2009
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  • doclach
    August 2009
    This is just through from Phil this morning. Talented photog Andrew Smythe has put together this rad interview and Toinzy has thrown in some pics from the mag.

    (If you aren't sure of Andrew's work, see Chris James interview on rippy forum: http://www.riptidemag.com.au/forum/view ... 0241d64bc3 and James Nymeyer http://www.riptidemag.com.au/forum/view ... 2cd5d8d9c1 )

    More of Andrew's shots are on his blog at:
    http://www.andrewsmythephotography.blogspot.com/
    (if you like wipeouts like I do, be sure to check out the 'no leash required shot)

    Big props to Andrew for putting this together - last time I saw these lads together was at Jose Marquina's birthday party a few weeks ago. As usual with the booger crew they know how to have a good time :twisted:

    It’s time to Le Boogie
    After years of being the most sought after and respected surf photographer in the business, Phil Gallagher has decided to throw down the gauntlet with the launch of his own all-photography magazine – Le Boogie.
    In the wake of the cancellation of Riptides Photo Annual, word of the creation of Le Boogie has aroused excitement among the masses. In the past the bodyboarding population has suffered a long wait for the Photo Annual, a single issue showcasing the year’s most amazing images captured by those who do it best. Le Boogie aims to curb this craving by delivering the best images by photographers from all around the globe in a gallery experience, but without the wait.
    Sitting down to talk with Phil Gallagher brings up mixed emotions; you’d love to hate the guy. Containing the jealousy is a hard task as he casually talks about tropical adventures with the likes of Jeff Hubbard and Spencer Skipper, or reminiscing about the day’s session over a beer with Mike Stewart.
    But these experiences aren’t taken for granted by the guy whose first shots were taken on a disposable camera in his home town of Urunga on the NSW mid-north coast. Since that time Gallagher has been passionate about photography, and now through Le Boogie he is able to give something back to the industry that has allowed him a life most only dream about.
    While Gallagher said the concept of a magazine run and designed by bodyboarders isn’t new, it is something he wants to encourage, and in doing so “give photographers another avenue to shoot bodyboarding and make a career of it”.
    “The most rewarding thing about Le Boogie is the idea of seeing young photographers advance through the magazine, teaching them new skills and then displaying their latest work to the public,” Gallagher said.
    Le Boogie also embodies the changing way we receive information.
    With technology allowing us to access news instantly from anywhere on Earth, by the time magazines go to print the information is often old or irrelevant. Gallagher believes if people want the latest news they will access it through other means ( internet). But that doesn’t mean there isn’t a future for magazines in a world which is becoming increasingly digital media orientated.
    “I don’t think people will ever want to stop buying magazines, there will always be people who appreciate being able to walk over to the shelf and pick up a hard copy of the latest issue.”
    And for those who want to see the latest photo galleries printed large on high quality paper, Le Boogie will be there – four times a year.
    As Gallagher says, “I want Le Boogie to appeal to everyone, be it a kid who wants to get stoked on photos, or a guy who has bodyboarded for 10 years, they all appreciate good clean images”.
    But everyone will be glad to hear Phil Gallagher plans to make the best of both worlds by using the latest pop culture icon, the iPhone. One of the most anticipated things about Gallagher’s new venture is the Le Boogie iPhone/iPod Touch app, which means the magazine can be delivered to anyone, anywhere in the world.
    The idea of being able to page through the latest issue of Le Boogie when you’re stuck at work or on a train really is something to get excited about, especially when you consider the calibre of photographers and riders already getting involved, with the mag attracting both veterans and fresh talent.
    “All the riders from the moment they heard about it have been so stoked on it, they have put a lot of their own time and effort into the first issue of le Boogie, and I will never be able to repay them” Gallagher says.
    “Everyone has wanted to help in any way they can. Riders have a lot of pull in these things, without them there would be no Riptide, Movement or Le Boogie.”

    - by Andrew Smythe
    Le Boogie will be available to purchase online in early September. You can preview the mag at http://www.leboogie.com and place your order. The digital format will be available through iTunes. Shipping: 5 days nationally, 7-10 days international. Subscriptions offered in issue two.

    Copyright Phil Gallagher
    BRADcopy.jpg


    Portrait of Phil by Andrew Smythe
    DSC_0005copy.jpg


    Portrait of Phil by Andrew Smythe
    DSC_0009.jpg


    Portrait of Phil by Andrew Smythe
    JT0E9428.jpg


    Portrait of Phil by Andrew Smythe
    PHIL9829.jpg

    Copyright Phil Gallagher
    RYANcopy.jpg

    Copyright Phil Gallagher
    THOMAScopy.jpg
  • doclach
    September 2009
    This from Toinzy to my inbox today:

    newitems.jpg
  • Scarecrow
    September 2009
    Hey Doclach!

    Shot for the offer dude, that's REALLY awesome. Only read your msg now though and cash flow taken a turn for the worse :cry: :cry:
  • doclach
    September 2009
    Le Boogie Review - Issue 1

    When you know a project from Phil Gallagher is coming – what do you expect? Something exceptional. 29 photographers (that’s right, 29, it’s not just Phil’s lens work in here) bring together a range of imagery that is both exceptional and elevating in every aspect.

    As soon as you touch the landscape format cover on quality stock with a mildly textured matt finish, you know there is going to be majic inside. The vibe is already oozing out.

    What is outstanding at first glance is what it doesn’t have. No barcode, no date, no prices, no issue number, no notes as to what is inside. Just “Le Boogie” in a sweet dual font script colour matched to the inverted slick on a background of ocean, spray and sky. That is it. Very Zen , very simple, very…… pure.

    Moving inward. Let’s get the advertising sorted - Inside front cover and half of first page is Novy in a keg with a throwing lip backed by a remote cliff. Neatly columned next to this is the man himself with industry stalwart Joel Taylor’s Unite logo. If there were page numbers to occlude any viewing of the sick pics, next would be page 2, but there ain’t, so this is just ‘next page’. Mitch Rawlins tweaked hard over BP in revo mode. BoogerKing logo in between. Page number ‘next one’ DLUX, Phil’s own. I received this for my birthday last year and it is one of my most treasured gifts ever received. Surrounded by some quoting madness it gives an insight to Phil’s random mind and quirky sense of the ridiculous.

    That is it – nada, no more, nothing ads-wise til you get to the inside back cover. Sweet mercy, in this world of commercialisation, sell, sell, sell it is just picture after picture. Le Boogie lacks that sense of commercialisation that haunts us in modern day booger print. Again, simplicity

    The Beginning:
    An introduction. Phil Gallagher is not too cool for school, he is a talented bloke, damn talented, but real. Maybe it’s a booger thing: you, the sponge, the wave, so underground, so off the radar of ‘normal’ humans. Whatever it is, the biggest response you will get from spongers is when something/someone has the real. This one word defines Gallagher to me and when the intro is headed by “Welcome, Thankyou, Enjoy”, that’s about as real as it gets. Openness, humility and passion.

    The Middle:
    The pictures: Bodyboarding in every aspect, angle and direction – more, more and more. Frothing. It’s what we want, a plethora of spongers on waves and in the air above them. Lifestyle shots, crew shots. Empties – there are a few, not too many. Sweet heaving fat-lipped bitches, usually in cross section so you can gaze into their deep pits, thrown straight from hell grinding across the page – or are they from heaven? Depends where your mindsurfing takes you.

    The articles: Dave Winchester – Intense profile shot with a simple, insightful interview with none of the bullshit. No ‘bignoting’, no stupid stunts, just the man on his stuff. “Clarity” is a double page insight into Phil’s technical camera mind. Technically call it a mini tutorial maybe. Personally I’d simply term it a passing on of some visual knowledge from one of the world’s best boog photogs. “Snap” Skip Spencer tells a lot in a little. A smattering of photos and 20 single sentence captions – pick your fave. “Analog” Todd Quigley gives the history of the picture on the QCD wall of Tom Morey holding what he calls “the first booger”. Breathtaking. “Unzipped” Ryan Mattick opens up on his transition from the belly to the lens. The pain at moments is transparent.


    The End:
    “The Brethren of the Lens” the names and source points of the 29 photographers who brought you this stunning, pristine work bringing the depiction of the art, power and prowess of the sponge to the next level. Credits and Contacts – faintly there as your eyes draw more across the main 1 ½ page spread of Pence tweaked up high. You almost don’t notice that the shot is by Luke Shadbolt, the Art Director for this premiere issue. Inside back cover, support from Manta with Brendon Backshall performing a tweaked scissor kick invert. Again clean with a sick riding shot. Back cover, it’s an ad for Nomad, but who can tell really with a few well placed logos and some tech words in small print scattered around the focal point of Thursto in a stinging right hander you’d give your right ‘nad to be in.

    This, my friends, isn’t just a magazine; Le Boogie a fine spectacular in ink and paper (or digital itunes if that is your gig) elevating boog to somewhere else.

    Doc
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