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  2. Bob McTavish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bob_McTavish

    McTavish was voted the most influential shaper of all time by Australia’s Surfing Life magazine in 1992. [13] From 1961 onwards McTavish worked for surfboard labels including Scott Dillon, Dale, Hayden, Bob Davie, Morey-Pope, Keyo and Cord. He worked alongside the Australian foam-core innovator Barry Bennett at his factory in Brookvale in ...

  3. Surfboards get a tech makeover - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/surfboards-tech-makeover...

    A surfboard’s highly personal suitability to individual physiques and waves—the perfect shortboard for an NFL-size old-timer in Montauk is too thick for a teen ripper in Huntington Beach ...

  4. Bob Cooper (surfer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bob_Cooper_(surfer)

    He also became an early surfboard shaper in California, working for the likes of Dale Velzy, [5] Reynolds Yater, and Tom Morey. [ 1 ] Cooper's signature ‘Bob Cooper Blue Machine’ model produced in 1967 and early 1968 by Morey-Pope Surfboards, was the only board of the era to feature an asymmetrical fin setup.

  5. Bruce Jones (surfboards) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bruce_Jones_(surfboards)

    Bruce Jones was a founding pioneer in the surfboard shaping industry.. The company he founded, Bruce Jones Surfboards, has built premium surfboards since 1973. Jones developed his skills by working with industry pioneers Hobart Alter founder of Hobie, Gordon Duane founder of Gordie Surfboards, and Dick Brewer founder of Dick Brewer Surfboards.

  6. Westfield Warringah Mall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Westfield_Warringah_Mall

    The centre was partially built on the site of 'Brookvale House', which was built by Sydney Alexander Malcolm in 1883 and was sold in 1961 to the Hooker Investment Corporation. Warringah Mall contained around 50 stores, including David Jones , Nock & Kirby , Franklins and Woolworths .

  7. Surfboard shaper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surfboard_shaper

    Surfboard shaping is not done so easily; it takes patience and determination to properly craft a surfboard. Starting from the room where it's crafted and finishing with its glassing process. Surfboard shapers use a shaping room to begin their craft. Usually the rooms are at least 5 m × 2 m (16 ft × 8 ft) and consist of fluorescent lights.

  8. Surftech - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surftech

    Surftech came to the fore at a time of increased focus on new technologies within the surfboard production industry. Whereas traditional boards are made using polyurethane foam "blanks" that are then cut and sanded to form by shapers, Surftech uses a process of blowing polystyrene into preset molds designed by its various shapers.

  9. Reynolds Yater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reynolds_Yater

    Reynolds Wood "Renny" Yater (born 1932 in Los Angeles) is an American surfboard builder. He was one of the first commercial surfboard builders of the 1950s and is best known for his noserider, the Yater Spoon. At that time, it was the thinnest and lightest board available.

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