Thrasher Magazine November 2000 — Page 85
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            PHOTOGRAVITI
T
ré-flip noseslide eluding you? Don't worry.
Just shoot the best of what you've got and
we'll decide who makes the cut. Send to:
Photograffiti c/o THRASHER
PO Box 884570
San Francisco, CA 94188-4570
Homies, hesh hair, and a Zero shirt may help a little, but
it all comes down to how badly you want to land it.
Billy Cole clears a loading dock gap in Pennsylvania.
Next up: air the handrail, kid! Photo: Smail.
Can't get tech-gnar but still want to
bust? Go for the big drop like Florida's
Daniel Mosquera did.
TWOMEN AND A TRUCK
988-7388
Wallrides to fakie are not hard. It depends on how much
vert you can stomach. Rod James demonstrates
serious intestinal fortitude and goes Spiderman on this
monster in lowa. Photo: Mecaro.
Sometimes even dyed-in-the-wool street dogs will hit
up tranny if the opportunity arises. Adam Burgess
rock fakies a rusty wobbler in Tampa. Photo: Sink.
Looks gnarlier than just a three-stair flip, huh? Canada's
Brandon Ungarian shows that no matter what caliber
guns you've got, you can still get good pics.
WOM
die
POOF
Steve Berra backside 50-50ed
the ledge to the right of these La
Cañada, CA, stairs. Sick.
George Miller's staircase
snap is no joke either.
Robb Stock works on his flatground heelflips in an
Oregon ski resort parking lot. Meanwhile, on the
slopes, snowboarders learn new spins within two tries.
Good-looking trick, the frontside rock. That explains why Tanuma Minoru
used two photographer's to shoot this stylish one in Japan. Photo: Tokieda.
We're all for janky backyard
ramps, but this thing is a major
sketchfest. Ron Deily of NJ: we
can deal with a narrow ramp
made of plywood, but a no-coping
backside Smith is too much.
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