Making surfboards is a specialized trade. You may be able to get schooling on composites but actually knowing the what and how of surfboard design is pretty much a learn by experience endeavor.
Sunday, January 28, 2007
Sunday, January 14, 2007
My Story post 10

D.R.
Sunday, January 07, 2007
My Story post 9
Sunday, December 31, 2006
Milestones, everybody has them…. an important event or turning point. As well, a marker that tells us how far we’ve gone. For the New Year most of us look back and reflect at least a little and say we made it through another one. The marker.
Cooper had come down to watch the surf while on his lunch break. He was Forman of The Morey-Pope shop at the time.
Saturday, December 23, 2006
Surf memories around Christmas time.

Christmas day wet suit pose.
Sunday, December 17, 2006
Learning to surf a shapers view post 3
Sunday, December 10, 2006
My story post 8

Sunday, December 03, 2006
How much has shaping surfboards changed over the years? What has become normal now was not accepted once, or at least looked at with some scorn. Shaping machines, profilers, even molded boards are Ok. It’s interesting don’t you think, the way the surfboard industry has evolved and changed?
Sunday, November 26, 2006
Back in the day the way to make a surfboard was by hand, though there were a couple of pop out type manufactures in the sixties. As a matter of fact, I worked for one of them. It was early in the year of 1967, before I started working at Morey-Pope.
The tail of a RP2.
Chocolate and cocoa butter lamination with soft green and yellow pin line.
Sunday, November 19, 2006
My story post 7
From day one of my surfing experience I’ve only had one surfboard that I didn’t make or shape for myself. It was a Phil Edwards model Hobie I bought used and surfed between 1965 and ’66.
Sunday, November 12, 2006
Thinking back to my teen years and making surfboards I've got to say I was very fortunate to have parents that supported me and my interests. Without it I would have never gotten that initial experience. All be it self taught.
The church that the family attended was growing and had just finished building a new sanctuary and church campus. There was a small modular building on the church grounds that was used for the construction office and was no longer wanted or needed at the church grounds after the project was completed. The word was put out that it was available. So I asked my parents if maybe I could get one of the modules. I was offered the middle section of the building that consisted of 4 pieces. The sides, floor and roof.
I thought if I got that building it could be put up against the back workshop of the house we lived in and all I'd need to do was make a front with a door and I'd have my own little enclosed place to make and repair surfboards. What a great Idea! I couldn't believe it, my parents said yes!
I don't know how we got that small building the 5 miles from the church to our back yard, but we did. Got the thing standing up and against the back work shop, made the front so it was enclosed, put the stands in it and started working on boards.
And work on boards is what I did. My older sister, 2 years my senior, said because of my little surfboard business she liked me. Why? "You always have money in your pocket" she said. My mom on the other hand…she could get so aggravated. I'd get a fair amount of phone calls, mainly over surfboard repairs. So she would have to go out back and tell me "you've got another phone call". I'd go in the family room where the phone was with sticky fingers from resin and the sticky resin would get transferred to the phone. Then she'd go use the phone and get sticky resin on her hands….DENNIS.. she'd scream. One of these days when we visit I've got to show her my cell phone, before I clean the sticky resin off of course.
D.R.
Sunday, November 05, 2006
Learning to surf, a shapers view. Post 2
So anyway, I’ve mentioned judgment. That’s being able to tell how fast you are moving in the water when you’re paddling, whether or not you should maneuver while paddling one direction or another to avoid colliding with someone. If you need to paddle faster to get past a breaking wave, paddle faster or slow down some in order to catch a wave.
Sunday, October 29, 2006
Learning to surf.. A shapers view.
One of the areas of my home break is a pretty good place to learn how to surf, at least during the months of May through September. The waves are usually small and the summer swells deposit sand on the beach making the place more casual. So the last few months I’ve seen my share of beginners.
Learning to surf takes time. Like just about anything else some people pick it up quickly and with some people it takes a bit longer. But there are a few things that can help improve the learning curve.
And, if you can paddle well you will begin to develop judgment. Without judgment learning to surf is very difficult.
Sunday, October 22, 2006
My Story post 5
My older brother did a little illustrating during his high school years and while I was making my first surfboard he took it upon himself do design a label for it. You can’t have a surfboard without a label.

I’d made copies of that label and used it for all the boards I made during my teens. I don’t really remember how many boards I made with that make shift label. I’d guess 8 or 10. The hard part was getting blanks. Unlike the first blank I made a board from that was pretty much already molded into a shape, I wanted blanks to shape. The blank companies, Walker and Clark, wouldn’t sell to a kid working in his parents back yard. So what’s a guy to do?
Some how I found out that Greg Noll made his own blanks and I got the hair brained idea that maybe I could buy blanks from him. What the heck, it doesn’t hurt to ask. So I made the trip to
What was I thinking? A 16 year old kid from nowhere standing in the office of a surfing icon and asking him some dumb questions. As I remember it, we conversed for a few minutes and then he said “ Ok, I’ll sell you some blanks.” So I left that day with a couple blanks and returned some weeks later and got a few more.
Resin and fiberglass was easy to get so now with blanks my little surfboard business was in full bloom. I actually had guys I talked into making boards for. The hard part for me was not sneaking off to the beach with a new board I made for someone and try it out before they came to pick it up.
D.R.
Saturday, October 14, 2006
It takes a certain amount of resin to saturate the fiberglass cloth over a bottom or deck of a board, but in order to "wet out" the lap the most common technique is to curtain the cloth that hangs down over the rails of the board with a resin pour. It takes a fair amount of resin to get the cloth that becomes the lap saturated and in the process maybe at least half the resin used to wet the lap ends up on the floor. The floors where surfboards are laminated are lined with a covering for protection.
Anyone that has ventured into a laminating room knows… there is plenty of hardened resin on the floors in the shape of a surfboard around the stands. The stuff builds up over time making the floor uncomfortable to walk on. At that point the floor covering needs to be picked up and a new floor covering is put down until the resin builds up again and then… repeat. Some shops build trays that are attached to the stands to catch the lap resin. The trays are lined with plastic so after the resin dries it can be lifted out of the tray and discarded. The floors stay clean longer but usually will need a new covering over the long run.
They say… “you can’t teach an old dog new tricks”. Well, this dog is stoked! I am now not only saving material but this new technique gets the job done better too. A better job, a better surfboard.
D.R.
Sunday, October 08, 2006
Are you like me… think back to times past and remember a certain surfboard you had and wish you still had it?
Like the first board I made would be nice to have for reference. But the second board I made was a refurbished balsa. Stripped the glass off of a 9 foot something cut it down and reshaped it into an 8’6. I can remember really liking that balsa board. I don’t know though, if I had it now I might be embarrassed to say I made it, who knows what it really looked like? Memories aren’t always real accurate. It was fun to ride though.
A couple years ago my once business partner Blinky heard of an old MP Blue Machine with my initials on it that was back in Maine or someplace east. He made an offer to the owners for a brand new Machine I’d made in exchange for the old one. The offer was accepted and Blinky made the exchange. The board was an early one too, proven by the label that was not like the Machine label once the model got marketed. I really wanted to see that old board when he got it but, when I did see it… well…it was just ok. Yeah, it was an early one, not as tuned in as I’d have liked to see. Humbling.
Yeah, I wish I had a few more of those memories in solid form. Something to hold, look at, feel. An old Vee bottom would be nice, the last MP I made myself… there are a few. Don’t know where I would keep them but it would be nice to have a few more of those old boards.
D.R.
Sunday, October 01, 2006
I don’t remember what the time period was but I’d guess it was by late spring of ’63 I had my board finished and ready to go to the beach. I didn’t live in a beach town so it wasn’t that easy to go surfing. But I did have a few friends that wanted to surf too so I got rides now and again and began the learning curve having gotten all the basics from surfing lessons.
It’s interesting the things that stick in our memoirs. Early memories of surfing for me are scattered around mostly large events like the family vacations to Newport Beach. Six to eight days of surfing in a row was a big help to learning.
The first family Newport outing that I got to take a surfboard on was in ’64. We stayed in Balboa on the bay side down the peninsula at about the Balboa pier. Surfing was done at the Newport pier. So I’d walk the distance between the to piers everyday to surf for a few hours before the black ball went up. Sometimes I’d get my brother to help me carry that 30lb board of mine, if I let him ride it a little. One guy at the nose one guy at the tail, off we’d go to Newport pier. I think I let him ride it a bit less than a little because he lost interest in helping after a few days so I ended up going the distance by myself.
A blanket neatly folded into an 18 inch square was the padding used on top of my head where the board would be perched the mile or so walk for a daily surf. Lucky thing I had a flat top hair cut!

D.R.
Sunday, September 24, 2006

So I had a surfboard blank. And as would be, I got around $20 from my grand parents for Christmas. I don’t think I waited more than a day after Christmas to get someone to drive me to the Van Nuys Standard Brands Paint store, you remember Standard Brands? That was like the original discount home center, and they carried resin and fiberglass. So I used my Christmas money to by the fiberglass and resin for my surfboard. I was set.
Surely no one dreamed of where this surfboard thing was going at the time. But, I think my parents were quite supportive of me and how much I wanted to make a surfboard and go surfing. No doubt it some times bugged the heck out of them. At the same time seems it became a good tool for them too. Any time I’d get myself into trouble they had the “ok you’re on restriction” line and it would be no more surfing or surf stuff for X number of weeks. Yeah, but did they know, I would hide in my closet to look at the latest issue of surfer magazine?
I got started on my surfboard. Had to sand the blank a bit and clean it up. Cut it in half and glue a ¾ inch redwood stringer in it. Clean the stringer up. Then glass it. Sand the glass job. And the fin? I made one in wood shop. Mahogany with a Maltese cross cut out of it. I got some orange pigment and did the final color work of stripes along the stringer and panels along both sides of the board. All in all it turned out good enough, probably weighed in at about 32lbs. The picture is me in the first stages of making my first surfboard.
Saturday, September 16, 2006
Since I had taken surfing lessons and wanted to continue surfing I needed a surfboard. Didn’t need a board for the lessons because they were provided. Surfboards back in the early sixties were a good hundred bucks and this 14 year old didn’t have that kind of money. Nor were my parents going to spring for one. Back in the day the kids in my family including me, didn’t just get stuff, we had to work for it.
Dave Sweet made his own blanks in the sixties and made them available retail. My parents with the help of my older sisters boy friend Jerry, a surf guy, got this bright idea to get me one of the Sweet blanks for a Christmas present in ’62. I still remember that Christmas day. Everyone opening presents including me, then I get maybe a shoe box size gift. I open it to find a key inside and am told it’s a key to the lock on the garage door. Everyone says "go out unlock and open the garage door". I have no idea what is going on but go ahead and go out side, everyone following me, and open the garage door... what do I see? A surfboard blank! I was so stoked, a blank put me one step closer to having my own board.
Sunday, September 10, 2006
So I got started with surfing.
And in a nut shell, I ended up doing board repairs and making some surfboards during my high school years. Moved to
I still like the ocean and live about 5 blocks from the Ventura Pier. Surf as much as time allows… my son is my surf buddy. Miss Kauai often. Hang with me kids and grand kids…teaching my oldest granddaughter to surf. And in general think about making good top quality surfboards.
Why should I make top quality surfboards? Because… I have a very deep history in surfboard construction and design, with some of the most respected names in the industry, a heritage that should not be let down. It’s who I am and what I do. I’m happy with that and I like it very much.