Where are you from/where do you currently live?
I grew up in Mission Viejo, CA. which is a little inland from San Clemente and Dana Point. I’m currently living in Ladera Ranch, which is a tad closer to the coast but basically in the same area that I grew up in.

Favourite surfspot?
Any right point break. Since I work in San Clemente that distinction goes to Church’s.
Favourite music right now?
Bon Iver, M. Ward, Band of Horses, Dr. Dog, Lightning Dust, Beach House, The Morning Benders, Ryan Adams, Surfer Blood, Yeasayer, Vampire Weekend
Describe The Ryde in one sentence
The Ryde is my creative outlet, a reason to make art, a clothing company, a source of great pride (and at times frustration), exciting, growing, loved and hated (depending on who you talk to), an amazing way to make a living.

How did The Ryde begin?
It was the last day of design class at community college. I had finished my final project and was using the computer to work on some t-shirt designs. This guy sitting behind me sees what I am working on and asks me if I’d be interested in designing a logo for this company he is starting. That guy is my good friend Mike and though that company didn’t work out, we continued working on things together. The next venture was a clothing company called Laguna Surf Company and was run out of Thalia Street Surf Shop. I was going to school up in San Luis Obispo and Mike would take photos of surf spots in Laguna, send them up to me, and I would illustrate them. We had success with that and decided we should expand beyond just Laguna. We changed the name and The Ryde was born.
What is the The Ryde style?
That’s hard for me to put into words. Our Fall 2010 line is very much inspired by the classic image of a life at sea in all of it’s forms. Is that vague enough?

Tell us a little about your background and how you got into surfing, art, fashion and creative stuff?
When I was a kid I would stay up late drawing pictures from baseball and hockey cards. I was a baseball nut. It was my life, my identity. In high school I didn’t make the baseball team and it broke me. I started surfing to fill the void. Surfing became my life, my identity. The summer before my senior year of high school I was surfing in Hawaii, a few hundred yards from shore, and I suddenly knew something was very wrong. I paddled to shore and my Dad was waiting for me when I got there. I couldn’t talk, and the last thing I remember is handing my board to my Dad. I had a seizure on the way to the hospital. They diagnosed me with epilepsy and I was told that I would not be able to surf ever again. I felt like every time I was ever passionate about something it was always taken from me. Just a few days before that I had accepted Jesus Christ as my savior and I had a decision to make. Do I trust that there is a plan for my life and this is just part of it, or do I feel sorry for myself and stay angry at God? Thankfully I decided on the former. I lost my drivers license because of my epilepsy. Without the option of surfing, I had a lot of free time on my hands. I started drawing again, taking art classes, playing guitar and reading the Bible. I realized that the focus in my life had been off when I let my passion for baseball, and then surfing, control my life and identity.
Eventually I was able to drive again, and start surfing again but my focus had changed. Now, because of my seizure, I have a great balance of passions in my life, but my identity is in Christ. And that identity can’t be taken from me.
What advice do you have for people who want to start their own brand?
It’s going to be hard. Make sure you love what you are doing. That’s really the only way that you will make it. If you have a partner make sure that you work well together and your talents compliment each other. Realize that it is a business and you can make the coolest stuff but if you can’t run a business you will fail. Talk to people who are successful businessmen and get their advice on business decisions. I was fortunate in that Mike handles the business side of things and he has built relationships with people who have good advice to give.

What are the things you love the most about what you do?
I love the creative process. Being inspired by something totally random. I love drawing. Having people get excited about the things I have made. Seeing an idea all the way through to execution and liking the final product.
Who/What are your main inspirations?
Iām inspired by people who over come difficult situations and come out better people because of their struggles. The photography of Ron Stoner is a big inspiration. He had an ability to capture the pure joy of surfing. Any one who is doing some thing to make oth ers smile is an inspiration.
What’s the best advice anyone ever gave you?
Love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, with all your strength and with all your mind, and love your neighbor as yourself.
That’s really hard to do, or fully comprehend, but a good goal to shoot for.

What tool or items could you not work without?
Last year I had surgery on my hand. I couldn’t use it for a few months. I found different ways to design. I think I can improvise and use whatever is available to me to be creative. That said, I do love my design vellum.

Describe your work space?
I have a desk by a window. A computer on the floor with two large flatscreen displays. A Wacom drawing tablet. A light table. Lots of pens, pencils and brushes. a scanner, lots of books and magazines, drawings taped to the walls, a clothing rack filled with our latest line and other clothes for inspiration, storyboards for Fall 2011, water, a fan, Dodgers bobble heads, iphone and headphones, laser printer etc.
Where can people buy your art and clothing online?
You can get my art at mattallen.com. The best place to get clothing from The Ryde is from theryde.com
Thanks Matt!
Really good webisodes, they are pretty long so if you dont have much time, definetely check out the second one!
Adrian Knott is the man behind the clothing label Rake and also creates really cool artwork both for sale and as a freelancer for other brands and intresting projects. Adrian was kind enough to take the time out to answer some questions about surfing, art and other stuff…
Where are you from/where do you currently live?
Torquay Vic Australia . The home of bells beach!

Above: Rake 5’0 ” shovel nose simmons
Favourite surfspot?
Broken head , Noosa , Corsair , Spooks or any hollow dredging beachy.

Above: Master Glasser Sean Nettleton & the barnacle bill log
Favourite music right now?
No real favourites I usually listen to the radio all day. I work from home alone so I don’t get to talk to anyone all day, a bit of talk back on the radio makes me feel like I am connected to the world.

Above: Jordan , Sean & Ado. Photo: Ryan Heywood
Describe Rake in one sentence?
Collaboration of friends, surfers,shapers,artists & photographers.

Above: Ado & Trent Whitehead. Photo: Shaun Freeman
How did Rake Clothing begin?
was doing another label called Arkive which I sold to Thalia Surf in California I was having dramas registering the name in the states so I dumped the whole thing. I thought it was time to focus my time into a brand that was based on all things I really liked.
I was pretty sick of the direction of the commercial surf steeze. I could see that there was a hole in the market for something different.
I came up with the name RAKE, not Garden rake it actually is a surfing term which describes the amount of the fin outline that is curved backwards , the angle between the back of the fin base & the offset of the tip of the fin. So that was it ! I had a name, now I wanted to gear the brand to fit in independent stores like Thalia Surf who had a slightly organic feel almost a mix of the old surf flavour mixed with contemporary, trying to focus the brand outside the competitive surf realm.
Once I had the clothing line underway I wanted to produce a solid range of specialized boards that would sit along side of the clothing.
I worked with Jordan Nobel & Sean Nettleton who are into riding and shaping alternate boards & worked with traditional pigments & tints.
The first range was super small but had a great reaction from the stores as they were looking for something new.

Above: Rake mini simmons foil
What is the Rake style?
A mix of the old surf flavour twisted in a modern way.

Above: micro fishin / noosa heads
Tell us a little about your background and how you got into surfing, art, fashion and creative stuff?
My old man was a keen surfer & talented illustrator so he got me in to surfing pretty young , we lived in Noosa Heads when I was 9 so
I could get a surf in before & after school. Later we moved back to the city which sucked as I only got to go to the beach on the weekend , I was always in to art so I knew from a early age that I wanted to work for a surf company some day, that was a dream for me.
I had a short stint at art school before I quit as they used to be really unsupportive of my kind of art they even told me there was no future in surf graphics so I left & ended up getting my first job at Piping Hot which was a good way to learn the ropes of the industry.
After that Job I managed to get a job at Rip Curl in Torquay, I got to work in all areas from wetsuit design to designing boardshorts.
It was a pretty sweet job, we travelled internationally for meetings & tradeshows, met loads of cool people but eventually it became stale
& boring so I left & started my own freelance design company since then I have worked for most of the surf companies, kids wear & fashion labels.

Above: Sean Nettleton
What advice do you have for people who want to start their own brand?
Its bloody hard work !!! I guess you have to be willing to do lots of work for little reward there is so much to do when you start up you have to be prepared to do all sorts of stuff from packing, invoicing, manufacturing, shipping as well as coming up with fresh designs that actually will sell to the retailer as well as out of the store.

Above: Handcrafted cedar fins & handplanes by Jason Westman
What are the things you love the most about what you do?
It can be pretty rewarding to see people wearing or surfing something you have created as well connecting with so many talented people who share the same interest in the surf lifestyle as I do.

Above: trimming green island peelers
Who/What are your main inspirations?
Sufers I am inspired by: Joel tudor, Tyler Warren, Ryan Burch, Richard Kenvin.
Artists : Geoff mc Fetridge, Steven Harrington, T-moe, Alex kopps , Nat Russell, Cahnam.
Friends : Dave Allee, Ryan Heywood, Trent Whitehead, Simon Perini, Cyrus Sutton, Shaun Freeman.

What’s the best advice anyone ever gave you?
Don’t go into business with your friends. This is a warning. I tried it once & it sucked.

Above: Rake cotton trunks
What tool or items could you not work without?
My computer is my main tool, it is so important for my work. It really makes life a lot easier.

Above: assorted tee prints
Describe your work space
I have a little studio at home , Clean & uncluttered . I like to have minimal things around me otherwise I feel crowded in my space. If I want to get messy I have a shed which doubles as a shaping bay. I usually build, screen print, paint & sand out there, it’s a pretty nice space & place to hang out.

Above: printed tissue , fiberglass, resin on wooden box wall art
Where can people buy your art and clothing online?
Online retailers are:
www.swell.com
www.surfstitch.com.au
www.jettysurf.com.au
www.thaliasurf.com
www.rakesurfboards.com.au
general enquiries : rakesurfboards@optusnet.com.au

Quik Pro Final this year was a good one… Be sure to check out Kelly Slaters wave at 2:17…
Amazing footage and surf from Ireland by photographer and bodyboarder Mickey Smith. check it out!
Got this link from The Critical Slide Society and must say that this is nothing short of amazing. Here are a few of my favourite shots. Check out the site here: Morgan Maasen












