The NSSA National Championships took place this past week.  As i thinks back upon it, the one thing that comes to mind is, I am so glad i'm not  14 right now!  The level of surfing is so high it boggles my mind.  

From 13 year old Ian Gentil in one day going from never getting a 10 to posting two perfect 10 rides in one heat!  He did that not in just any heat but in the boys open final!  A feat that has only been done by very few surfers throughout history.

There were stand out performances from the 10 year olds all the way up to the mens division.  


The teenager made history...twice -- tying and then passing Bobby Martinez's record mark of seven national titles. All tolled, Brother surfed six heats on the last day of competition and went three for four in finals for the day, tallying wins in the Open Mens, Explorer Boys and Airshow. He is also the youngest winner of an Open Mens national title in NSSA history. 

There's nothing out there like the Nationals.  The energy of the kids, the level of surfing, at at the end of the  day the smiles on their cute little faces.  For more information and results check out nssalive.com


OPEN MENS
Kolohe Andino
Evan Thompson
Alex Smith
Conner Coffin

OPEN WOMENS
Lakey Peterson
Courtney Conlogue
Malia Manuel
Nage Melamed

OPEN JUNIORS
Ezekiel Lau
Conner Coffin
Matty Costa
Kaimana Jaquias

EXPLORER MENS
Kiron Jabour
Alex Smith
Dylan Goodale
Tanner Hendrickson
Fisher Heverly
Makana Eleogram

EXPLORER JUNIORS
Kiron Jabour
Tanner Hendrickson
Fisher Heverly
Evan Thompson
Dylan Goodale
Kolohe Andino


 

Stef Tor



She’s from Toronto, Canada and is now residing in Orlando, Florida. Ever since Stef Tor stepped onto the wakeskate scene, she has been setting an example for women wakeskaters across the globe, opening the doors for pro women riders such as Jen GilanFarr to come into the sport. Not only is she a trailblazer for women’s wakeskating, she is also a very talented fashion designer, who has her own amazing style! Stef shares with us what she’s been up to this past year and what her goals and plans are for the future.

PiperGirls: You have been a pioneer in women’s wakeskating. How did you get into wake sports?

Stef: I started in Canada when I was 18. In 1998, I went to a camp called McClintock’s. It was mainly water ski, I was one of the only wakeboarders. I went for a week and I stayed for four months. I just turned it into a job. I went there and loved it! I remember the first day, I called my mom and told her “I love this”. I went to the Pro Shop because all the people there were like, “Why don’t you try to work here? The lady in the Pro Shop needs some help”, because I had sales experience. So I went in, I traded my hours for riding, and I just stayed the whole summer. It was pretty rad. 

PG: You did not compete in the Pro Tour in 2008. Why did you take last year off?

Stef: I missed last year because I broke my leg. It took an entire year [to heal]. The whole year I could not do contests. Instead of contests I did all the [Liquid Force] Maven sessions. This year I’m just going to do Nationals and Worlds, and that’s it. 

PG: How did you break your leg?

Stef: Wakeskating in Dallas at Gilley’s, the bar. It was for the Dallas Boat Show, and they had a rail jam set up at night, and I broke my leg on the side of the decking of the rail. I broke my tibia and had to go to the Dallas hospital. After I flew back, I had like, three casts, and crutches, then a walking boot, and a cane. I think it took a long time to heal because I was on the road so much. I was in airports, on wheelchairs, trying to lug gear, doing stuff I probably shouldn’t have been doing instead of sitting at home. 

PG: How did you make the transition from wakeskating to fashion?

Stef: I don’t know if there would be a transition. I guess I’d say I did the fashion first. I was doing fashion in high school. I started wakeskating when I was 18 and then I went to fashion school in Toronto and graduated when I was 21. Then as soon as I was 21 I went to Florida and went to the Hanson’s, WWC – The World Wakeboard Center. I wouldn’t say I transitioned, [fashion] was always there. Then I was wakeskating, and the last eight years all I have done is travel for clinics and demos, mostly traveling for Liquid Force. Last year when I broke my leg, and I was getting older, I realized that I needed to transition back into the fashion. Right now I’m trying to do both wakeskate and fashion, but before [wake] was fashion, all fashion, then it was all wakeskating, and now it’s kind of both. 

PG: What was your first job in the fashion industry and what was that like?

Stef: The very first would probably be my internship in high school at Fabric Land in Canada. They call it co-op, cooperative education in Canada, so I did that. It was like, going in every day and cutting fabric for old ladies and rolling them on the bolts and stuff. That’s probably my first fashion job. Then, when I graduated fashion school in Toronto I worked for a company called Bruzer which is kind of equivalent to UGP in the States. They were called Bruzer Clothing for Board Society and it was all like, wakeboard wear, and there were a couple top Canadians on their team. They mainly survived doing blanks and they would put college logos on them. They still do that, they actually do all of the universities and colleges in Canada. I actually worked in-house there as a production assistant, which was amazing if I had stayed. Everything was done in house, like sample sewing, the warehouse was there, the pattern cutters, the markers, the plotters, like, everything, so that was I would say my real first fashion job. I was 20 turning 21. 

PG: What was your experience doing fashion for UGP?

Stef: Fashion for UGP was good. I started out as a rider for them, for a few years. They knew I had my fashion degree and we always talked about doing some work but I was never around. I would go in to pick up a paycheck and I would stay for like, eight hours. Everyone else would just drop by, pick it up and leave, and all my friends were like, “See you in eight hours”. So I was gone a whole day ‘cause they would be like, “OK, can you sit down and measure these shorts and tell us how this fits? I would always tell them “I can help you but I can’t explain this in, like, a day. I’d have to come and work [for UGP].” So they always said, “You know, maybe one day when you have time you can come in part time.” So I knew in the back of my mind that, the whole time I was wakeskating, I said, “You know what, I want to work with UGP” . The season before I broke my leg I started thinking, “I want to make some extra money and start building my portfolio and my resume”, because eight years is a long time to not have anything but just professional athlete. I called them and they were like, “Yeah, come in” and then I started designing for them, so it was good. 

PG: What are some of your inspirations when designing a clothing line?

Stef: I have a lot of inspiration! Music, definitely, I watch a ton of music videos. A lot of [my design] is like a mix between street wear and runway stuff. The only aspect that comes from sports is the comfort and how strongly the clothes hold up because I know I’m pretty rough on clothes. I want to make stuff that’s going to last, that’s not cheap. I definitely like colors, I’m really into colors. I guess mostly music and just from traveling and stuff. I really like Japanese fashion, I like the whole layered look, just tons of layering. 

PG: How do you stay current with all of the fashion trends? As a designer, how do you keep up?

Stef: You have to do research all the time. Tons and tons of research. Brandon (Stef’s boyfriend) is a music video fanatic and we’re both really good at [research]. A lot of trend forecasting you have to pay thousands of dollars for, but I go to www.Style.com a lot. Traveling is another big thing, if you’re actually there, you know. When we went to San Diego we made sure we took a day to go to L.A. and we had a hit list of all the stores we wanted to go to. Also a lot of news and music, because everything affects fashion. You can’t be closed-minded, you can’t live in a box, you have to just be listening to everything all the time. Lots of magazines, too. 

WG: What are some of your favorite magazines?

Stef: I love FOAM,  Elle and I like Vogue, I’m not a big fan of Marie Claire anymore. I like Teen Vogue a lot too. I have been reading Teen Vogue since I was so young, but it’s kind of the mix I need, because right now I do street stuff that its affordable so I need to know what that market is going for. 

PG: What have you learned about the fashion industry from extreme sports?

Stef: Snow[boarding] is the most fashion-forward extreme sport. You can tell that they do the most research and pay for all the trend forecasting, and have bigger design teams. You can see that now everything is pop, colors and pop culture. And they have been with it [for a while]. Not to talk bad about wake, but we’re kind of the last ones. We don’t really have a lot, all we have is board shorts and then a vest, but the vests still have to stay kind of classic because they know people are not going to buy a vest like they would buy a t-shirt. So the vests have to stay in certain colors. So I would say that wake is definitely the last, and skateboarders don’t really care what they wear. Snowboarding just has all the stuff. The one thing that I love is that when I was first wakeboarding I had to wear guy’s shorts and stuff, so I am happy to see that they have made women’s vests, women’s shorts, women’s bindings, everything women’s so that’s a good thing. 

PG: So tell us about the IADT fashion show. How did you get into it?

Stef: I graduated in 2000 from George Brown College in Toronto and the last eight years I’ve just been doing wakeskating. That’s a lot of time to be out of the fashion industry. When I was in schools there were no computers, I didn’t have a laptop at school or anything. I didn’t even have a cell phone at school. When I broke my leg I wanted to do something because I always want to better myself, but I couldn’t really do anything. I looked into IADT about four years ago and I thought about going back and doing some stuff but I couldn’t at the time because I didn’t have my green card, so I was considered an international student and it would have been triple the price [to attend]. I finally got my green card in 2005 and I wondered if I could go and take a class here and a class there. I wanted to take computer generated pattern drafting because we didn’t have that when I was in school so I called them and they said it was good, which was pretty rare because most schools don’t let you be a non-degree seeking [student]. I took two classes and then the fashion director Sarah Miller asked if I would be doing the fashion show, and I asked if I could do it, and she said, “Well, you’re a student, aren’t you?” I started working on eight designs to submit and I remember Brandon saying, “What if you get all of those accepted?” and I said, “I’m not going to get all eight.” They accepted all eight. There were different segments: “Candy Coated”, “Hardware”, “Red Carpet”, and “Avant Garde”. You had to pick which segment you wanted to design for. Candy Coated was bright, bold, colorful prints, and I picked Candy Coated because I wanted to work with colors. It was amazing, I got two awards for it, Best in Show and Most Innovative Design. I was like, I feel good because I haven’t lost it! 

PG: How did this fashion show compare to others you have done?

Stef: We did a UGP one that was more like a rock and roll punk show and it was hard because I was working with BMXers and, like, a bunch of dudes, and it was at Odin’s Den, which is a dive bar where people like, spit on the floor. But that was the image [UGP] wanted. That wasn’t my favorite show. I’ve done two shows in Toronto and one in London, but this one obviously was my favorite because I got two awards. I feel like I’ve matured so much as a person and as a designer and I feel like I understand the whole fashion industry and garment construction. I feel like I understand it way more now. Being part of [IADT] is awesome, I just got an email from the fashion director and she’s like, this magazine wants to do an interview with you on Monday, and then there’s another show. I only took two classes and I’ve got these connections now. I almost want to take another class next year so I can do the show. I said that to Brandon the other day and he’s like, “So you can defend your title?” [laughs] 

PG: What was the after party like?

Stef: It was pretty fun, it was at Red Coconuts in Universal Citywalk. I almost felt like a celebrity, it was weird, people wanted me to sign their programs. I was signing autographs and it was weird, I mean, I’ve done that in wakeskating, but I was like, “I’m just a student here!” I met a lot of industry people, it was awesome. There was a big difference from a wake party to [the IADT afterparty]. Everyone was dressed up and they were all into hair and makeup. It was good, it was a nice little mix. My mom and my grandma were there, they were proud, they had their little Canadian pins on. They were pretty cute! 

PG: You recently tried out for Season 7 of Project Runway. What was the experience like?

Stef: I was telling Brandon, “I want to go on Project Runway and I’m going to find out when the castings are”. Two days later I got an email from the fashion director at IADT with a link to the Project Runway application. From the time I got the email to the time I had to submit everything I had like, six days. It was like, twenty pages of a questionnaire and I needed to do all this stuff for a portfolio: front view, back view, side view, detailed view of my designs. I put together a portfolio and a five minute video that Brandon did. I sent everything in on a Friday and on Monday I got a call and they said I was selected to go to the closed casting for Season 7 in Atlanta. Everything just happened at once! We got in the car with all of the clothes, my grandma and my mom helped me steam them all. Bess and Meg (from Carrie Marine Photography) helped me big time. They spent four days taking photos for me, I got my friend Amanda to model and everything. I got to Project Runway in Atlanta and I met with Tim Gunn and some other judges. I got a maybe, but then I got the call that I didn’t make it through. I can try out next year. But now I have a great portfolio and the experience of going through that on my resume. I got to do a big interview afterwards. 

Brandon: So you still may make the show. 

Stef: Next year, Season 8 maybe. 

PG: So what do you have planned for the rest of the summer and the rest of the year?

Stef: That’s what we’re trying to figure out. Right now, because I’m home for June, I want to try to ride as much as I can for all the time I missed, you know, in my little sweatshop upstairs! Nationals is the first week of July so I definitely want to do that so I want to ride as much as I can behind our new boat. I’m also trying to focus on getting some coverage for my clothes, like doing the interview with you guys, and with Oasis magazine. I want to keep building my portfolio, I’m going to try to keep sewing. I don’t want to put a ton of pressure on myself and have a deadline, but I want to keep making stuff and building stuff up so that if there is a new fashion show I can show some new stuff too. 

PG: Would you like to say anything about your sponsors?

Stef: Thank you Osiris Shoes, Dragon, Liquid Force, Jet Pilot, Rockstar, LA Fitness, Bern Helmets, Miami Ski Nautique, Bess and Meg from CarrieMarine, Justin From Own Two Hands and Brandon Parker for all his filming! 

PG: What do you think should be some of the main focuses for people trying to break into the fashion industry? What are some of the steps they should take?

Stef: School, definitely. Some people say you don’t have to go to school but there is so much more to garment construction than people think, just all of the math and stuff. If you don’t go to school, you can kind of cut corners, but I would say going [to school] for at least a couple of years. Just be ready for a challenge, it is so competitive. I would say it’s more competitive than sports, it’s just a really hard industry to break through. Girls, guys, everybody wants to be in fashion somehow. There are fashion designers everywhere but it’s just really hard to get a job in the industry. One person has a job and they usually have it for years. It’s not a job that they go at and then leave in a couple of years. So you are waiting for Karl Lagerfield to like, retire or something! I’d say travel, and research and just stay on top of it. Network and just be a people person. I can’t see someone who is really quiet and shy [making it in the industry]. Maybe, but it’s just hard to get noticed. Even fashion designers have to do interviews.

I am a blog whore. I read way too many and sometimes get sucked in for really long stints of time. One blog I contantly read has links on the side.. you click those... you click a link on that site... and so on and so on. Today I stumpled on http://www.gnarlitude.com  Love that this girl had FOam mag next to Sophmore tee and Chanel Makeup and a Bukowski and vans stickers.. I feel like we might be best friends and I don't even know her...




Read more


A career in art was a secret dream that I didn't even tell myself out loud until I was in my mid-twenties.  At the time I was traveling around the surf destinations of the world wondering what I was meant to do with the abyss of time in front of me.  It was a white fog that I did everything I could to avoid staring into.

The panicky feeling started after I graduated, I didn't know what to do with myself: I had a Bachelor of Fine Arts in acting, possibly the most useless piece of paper anyone has ever paid tuition for.  I knew I wasn't an actor after second year but at my family's urging I finished my degree.   I traveled abroad in the summers to surf, skate and see what else was out there.  (those summers are another story, which deserve a whole entry)

At that time in my mid-twenties when I discovered I wanted to be an artist I was living on the North Shore of Oahu surfing and cleaning vacation rentals for free rent.  I budgeted $50 a week for food and shared a shack with 5 boys, 4 cats and bedbugs.
Life was so  great when it was good:  I got to surf and skate and live like ferrel teenager.  Most of the rest of the time wasn't fun: it rained for a biblical 48 days straight my first winter so no matter what time of day or night, everything was damp, the surf was big and messy forEVER, the vacation rentals were over crowded so there was twice the work just to pay for the bed in a shack and on top of everything my food money was running out.

There was this pivotal day I got a call from my boss about a complaint that I didn't scrub a toilet to the guest's standards and I would have to go back and do it again.  As I scrubbed the inside rim of the uptight Norwegian guest's toilet, trying to explain that it wasn't a bad job, rather the old toilet had been stained because the porcelain was worn away... I started wondering if this was the best I could do in life.  A panicky feeling welled up inside and without knowing what I was going to do or say, I walked to the office with a combination of seething anger and utter defeat.

The lady that owned the vacation rentals always seemed cold to me, and I got the feeling she didn't really care to hear problems unless they were disrupting business.  I opened the door and said something to the effect of "I can't do this anymore.  I work twice as hard as the boys do because I'm the only one who does a decent job, on any given week my mattress is either full of bedbugs or full of bug poison, I'm living off the food left by your guests when they leave and no matter how hard I scrub the oldest toilet in the world, it will NEVER appear clean!"  She took a moment, looked me over and asked "can you drive?"

I ended up driving her 13 year old son to his private school in Honolulu 4 days a week, a job which afforded me my own room and $100 a week!  I was so happy with my good fortune that I didn't even notice that my 6 months were up and I was supposed to go back to Canada.. besides  I couldn't!  Not now!  I was finally living comfortably and the winds of destiny were blowing in my direction, what if I missed that special once in a lifetime discovery that would change the course of my existence?!!

In the year I drove Conner to school, I spent a lot of afternoons killing time in Honolulu waiting to pick him up.  I didn't lay around on the beach or shop. Waikiki wasn't my thing and I had no money for shopping so I spent most afternoons in the university library looking up books on favorite artists and how-to books on figure drawing... I figured I had some good stories that would work in autobiographical comic form but I just needed some artistic skills to pull them off.  I'd never been to school for art, but I'd been drawing my whole life, it was just something I was compelled to do.   I had stacks of sketchbooks at home in Canada and with this new windfall of $100 a week, picked up some supplies and started drawing again.  This time it was different though because I had a whole day to devote to it and I treated those afternoons like school.  When I picked up Conner, I'd ask him what he learned that day and he'd look through my book to see how my drawing was coming along.  I think having someone to answer to at the end of the day was the biggest motivator to gain the technical skills and start executing my own original ideas.  He was a creative kid himself and I really valued his opinion.   Not long after, I started doing sweet graphics for his surfboards. Next came a little series of paintings inspired by our after school surf sessions (some I joined in on if the surf was small, and some I stayed on the shore taking in the beauty of North Shore life as an observer).  He told me I should get my work up at the Pupukea Starbucks, which I asked about but I was told it was the domain of a local artist.   Fate stepped in:  not 3 days later, I got a call from Starbucks telling me the local artist was moving to Maui and the space was available!  After that things moved pretty fast, the owner of Wyland Galleries noticed my work and I got an offer to hang at the gallery, Freesurf did an article on me and I was being commissioned by people I never dreamed I'd meet in real life!   It seemed pretty clear that it was the beginning of a career in art.

Eventually I did have to go home to Canada and face the music regarding my massive overstay in America, but I've made it work for the last couple years by commuting back and forth as much as I can, trying not to miss anything important, (but sometimes feeling painfully out of the loop).  Although it's a struggle to keep the momentum going, I've managed in the mean time to become an official Triple Crown Artist, do shows as far away as Brazil and Denmark, and get my work published in several magazines.  Fate gave me a huge series of opportunities and I'm not going to let it go easily.  I just got back from the North Shore a couple weeks ago and I've made the decision that I'll do whatever it takes get back to the place where my life as an artist began so I can see where it takes me next!

-SHINN


Read more

Alternative Apparel Orange Label Dance Top $38
Alice + Olivia for Payless. So Amazing and surprisingly easy to wear all night! $34.99 only in stores.
Tom's shoes. I love Tom's... in fact I'm wearing them right now. Who doesn't love cute shoes that go to a good cause! I love the tie dye!! $50

Butterfly Vial brass necklace/ Sourced ethically. Handmade by Lady Lavona. $45

Tracey Feith a super fun beach wear designer is the newest GO International designer to hit Target. I love this loose weave Stripe Sleeve Cardigan. $29



Read more


A career in art was a secret dream that I didn't even tell myself out loud until I was in my mid-twenties.  At the time I was traveling around the surf destinations of the world wondering what I was meant to do with the abyss of time in front of me.  It was a white fog that I did everything I could to avoid staring into.

The panicky feeling started after I graduated, I didn't know what to do with myself: I had a Bachelor of Fine Arts in acting, possibly the most useless piece of paper anyone has ever paid tuition for.  I knew I wasn't an actor after second year but at my family's urging I finished my degree.   I traveled abroad in the summers to surf, skate and see what else was out there.  (those summers are another story, which deserve a whole entry)

At that time in my mid-twenties when I discovered I wanted to be an artist I was living on the North Shore of Oahu surfing and cleaning vacation rentals for free rent.  I budgeted $50 a week for food and shared a shack with 5 boys, 4 cats and bedbugs.
Life was so  great when it was good:  I got to surf and skate and live like ferrel teenager.  Most of the rest of the time wasn't fun: it rained for a biblical 48 days straight my first winter so no matter what time of day or night, everything was damp, the surf was big and messy forEVER, the vacation rentals were over crowded so there was twice the work just to pay for the bed in a shack and on top of everything my food money was running out.

There was this pivotal day I got a call from my boss about a complaint that I didn't scrub a toilet to the guest's standards and I would have to go back and do it again.  As I scrubbed the inside rim of the uptight Norwegian guest's toilet, trying to explain that it wasn't a bad job, rather the old toilet had been stained because the porcelain was worn away... I started wondering if this was the best I could do in life.  A panicky feeling welled up inside and without knowing what I was going to do or say, I walked to the office with a combination of seething anger and utter defeat.

The lady that owned the vacation rentals always seemed cold to me, and I got the feeling she didn't really care to hear problems unless they were disrupting business.  I opened the door and said something to the effect of "I can't do this anymore.  I work twice as hard as the boys do because I'm the only one who does a decent job, on any given week my mattress is either full of bedbugs or full of bug poison, I'm living off the food left by your guests when they leave and no matter how hard I scrub the oldest toilet in the world, it will NEVER appear clean!"  She took a moment, looked me over and asked "can you drive?"

I ended up driving her 13 year old son to his private school in Honolulu 4 days a week, a job which afforded me my own room and $100 a week!  I was so happy with my good fortune that I didn't even notice that my 6 months were up and I was supposed to go back to Canada.. besides  I couldn't!  Not now!  I was finally living comfortably and the winds of destiny were blowing in my direction, what if I missed that special once in a lifetime discovery that would change the course of my existence?!!

In the year I drove Conner to school, I spent a lot of afternoons killing time in Honolulu waiting to pick him up.  I didn't lay around on the beach or shop. Waikiki wasn't my thing and I had no money for shopping so I spent most afternoons in the university library looking up books on favorite artists and how-to books on figure drawing... I figured I had some good stories that would work in autobiographical comic form but I just needed some artistic skills to pull them off.  I'd never been to school for art, but I'd been drawing my whole life, it was just something I was compelled to do.   I had stacks of sketchbooks at home in Canada and with this new windfall of $100 a week, picked up some supplies and started drawing again.  This time it was different though because I had a whole day to devote to it and I treated those afternoons like school.  When I picked up Conner, I'd ask him what he learned that day and he'd look through my book to see how my drawing was coming along.  I think having someone to answer to at the end of the day was the biggest motivator to gain the technical skills and start executing my own original ideas.  He was a creative kid himself and I really valued his opinion.   Not long after, I started doing sweet graphics for his surfboards. Next came a little series of paintings inspired by our after school surf sessions (some I joined in on if the surf was small, and some I stayed on the shore taking in the beauty of North Shore life as an observer).  He told me I should get my work up at the Pupukea Starbucks, which I asked about but I was told it was the domain of a local artist.   Fate stepped in:  not 3 days later, I got a call from Starbucks telling me the local artist was moving to Maui and the space was available!  After that things moved pretty fast, the owner of Wyland Galleries noticed my work and I got an offer to hang at the gallery, Freesurf did an article on me and I was being commissioned by people I never dreamed I'd meet in real life!   It seemed pretty clear that it was the beginning of a career in art.

Eventually I did have to go home to Canada and face the music regarding my massive overstay in America, but I've made it work for the last couple years by commuting back and forth as much as I can, trying not to miss anything important, (but sometimes feeling painfully out of the loop).  Although it's a struggle to keep the momentum going, I've managed in the mean time to become an official Triple Crown Artist, do shows as far away as Brazil and Denmark, and get my work published in several magazines.  Fate gave me a huge series of opportunities and I'm not going to let it go easily.  I just got back from the North Shore a couple weeks ago and I've made the decision that I'll do whatever it takes get back to the place where my life as an artist began so I can see where it takes me next!

-SHINN


Read more

PiperGirls Posts

Lyndz Adams Hawkins Makes History!
Posted on 11/23/2009
Views:0
Steph Gilmore RIPPING Somewhere in Mexico!
Posted on 11/20/2009
Views:0
Nikita is looking for some talented ladies to perform at SIA.
Posted on 11/18/2009
Views:0
More Than Racer
Posted on 11/18/2009
Views:0
ASP WOMEN'S WORLD TITLE RACE HEATS UP
Posted on 11/18/2009
Views:0
TWITTER THIS!!
Posted on 11/16/2009
Views:0
Sofia Mulanovich Claims Movistar Peru Classic pres. By Rip Curl
Posted on 11/10/2009
Views:0
Movistar Peru Classic Rd 1 In The Books!
Posted on 11/5/2009
Views:0
Coco Ho Claims First ASP Dream Tour Victory at Rip Curl Women's Pro Search
Posted on 10/29/2009
Views:0
IN HAWAII! COME VISIT ME AT WYLAND NORTH SHORE AN...
Posted on 10/29/2009
Views:0
We all know that exercise is one of the best ways ...
Posted on 9/30/2009
Views:0
SWIM WITH ME_THE SURF GALLERY_ OPENING RECEPTION O...
Posted on 9/29/2009
Views:0
2 new mini paintings I juuuust finished!
Posted on 9/23/2009
Views:0
PiperGirls - Casio Contest Winner!
Posted on 8/19/2009
Views:146
VOTE FOR STEPH GILMORE!!! FEMALE SURFER OF THE YEAR!!!!
Posted on 8/9/2009
Views:220
USA takes top honors at Billabong ISA World Games in Costa Rica; France: 2nd, Australia: 3rd
Posted on 8/9/2009
Views:156
Surf Ladies at US Open - come get casted!
Posted on 7/22/2009
Views:249
diy: el concho cortos from Bleach Black
Posted on 7/22/2009
Views:250
Pipergirls - Fox Contest Winner!
Posted on 7/16/2009
Views:347
New Pipergirls Contests!
Posted on 7/9/2009
Views:268
3 NEW CONTESTS ON PIPER GIRLS!!!! Happening NOW!!!
Posted on 7/1/2009
Views:294
NSSA NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS 2009
Posted on 6/29/2009
Views:223
Catching up with Pro Wakeskater/ Fashionista Stef Torr
Posted on 6/18/2009
Views:374
Foam Love - Gnarlitude
Posted on 6/10/2009
Views:295
The beginning of a career in art
Posted on 6/4/2009
Views:268
5 things I love today 5 under $50
Posted on 6/4/2009
Views:260
The beginning of a career in art
Posted on 6/3/2009
Views:220
The beginning of a career in art
Posted on 5/28/2009
Views:266
New FOAM MAGAZINE Digital Issue Available!
Posted on 5/22/2009
Views:295
PiperGirls - Element Contest Winner!!!
Posted on 5/22/2009
Views:390
SURF INTO YOGA HAWAII PREMIER
Posted on 5/22/2009
Views:305
CHECK OUT THE NEW AUSTRALIA ISSUE OF FOAM OUT NOW!!!
Posted on 5/19/2009
Views:221
Skate Parks Jump the Gap To Green Design
Posted on 5/19/2009
Views:201
The Volcom Girls Invade FOAM HQ
Posted on 5/15/2009
Views:427
Video of Layne Charging a HUGE Barreling Slab in OZ
Posted on 5/15/2009
Views:209
Volcom VQS Hillbilly Ho Down YEEEHAWW!
Posted on 5/15/2009
Views:267
LAYNE BEACHLEY SCORES MASSIVE SHACK!!!
Posted on 5/15/2009
Views:192
Things I am loving on today
Posted on 5/14/2009
Views:169
Keep A Breast and Me in SF!
Posted on 5/14/2009
Views:138
PiperGirls - Enter the New Fox Contest!
Posted on 5/12/2009
Views:198
New Music from Kate Earl
Posted on 5/12/2009
Views:181
Show Keep A Breast your Support... and your boobs!
Posted on 5/11/2009
Views:167
Get to Know Volcom Team Rider Professional Skater Lyn-Z Adams Hawkins
Posted on 5/7/2009
Views:219
"The Present" a film By Thomas Campbell
Posted on 5/7/2009
Views:198
Nikita Chickita Europe Wrap-Up
Posted on 5/4/2009
Views:229
Sally Fitzgibbons Wins Estoril Billabong Girls Pro
Posted on 5/3/2009
Views:273
Top Seeds Dominate on Day 1 of Estoril Billabong Girls Pro
Posted on 5/3/2009
Views:236
Estoril Billabong Girls Pro Expected to Kick off at Guincho Tomorrow
Posted on 5/1/2009
Views:392
North Shore check-in
Posted on 4/27/2009
Views:206
New Pony Attack Twisted Tunic!
Posted on 4/26/2009
Views:195
  • PiperGirls is a gathering place. It's a community connecting you with your passions, a place where your voice can be heard and a way for you to talk to Foam Ambassadors. Cool girls doing cool stuff.
  • Promote the PiperGirls Community
  • PiperGirls Feed for your site