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Custom assembly by Hoopdriver Bicycles, Fall 2009.
Custom modification of large chainring for chainguard.
Vintage, original Masi 3V Volumetrica road.
The Masi 3V Volumetrica, introduced in 1981, and developed and produced by Alberto Masi during the early 1980's was way ahead of its time with innovative internal lugs and oversized steel tubing. This type of construction made a huge impact on modern framebuilding; the use of oversized tubing on road bike frames is commonplace today.
Photograph by client, Mike Ara.
VW corporate event stage. Stage levels, faces, and custom walls wrapped with felt carpeting materials. ©Bombshell Productions
Some additional angles of model of the Town Hall of Deurne, which I built as a wedding present to two dear friends.
From a cool article on custompcblog.com about our building affordable Solid Stat Linux systems for business and home applications.
Continental 'Gatorskin' folding, 25mm.
Mavic 'Open Pro' rims, Wheelsmith double-butted spokes, 105 hubs.
Handbuilt - to the highest standards.
Custom assembly by Hoopdriver Bicycles, Fall 2009.
Custom paint by Velocolour, Toronto.
It's hard to see here but there are white Fat Chance decals and small white stars on the stem and fork.
FINISHED ! And lookin cool ! Parts back from poweder coating and she's going to the dyno for jetting next ....
Soma 'Buena Vista' 58cm frameset
Brooks B67 saddle.
Wald rack and basket.
Velo-Orange fenders and chainguard.
Schwalbe 'Delta Cruiser' whitewalls. Generic crank, pedals, post, stem, bars.
Tektro brakes and levers
Shimano 8 speed shifter and derailleur
Alex DH22 rims
Shimano Deore hubs and BB
DT spokes
Tange headset
A unique perspective shot through the mouth of a creature-themed art car, revealing children interacting with a skeleton-costumed figure during the Trunk or Treat event in Tulsa’s Meadow Gold District on October 26, 2024. Captured on expired Fuji Sensia 100 film with a Nikon FG-20, this photo creatively frames the playful Halloween scene, blending both art car culture and festive family fun.
Nikon FG-20 | Fuji Sensia 100
Digitized with Canon EOS M200 | Negative Supply Lightbox
Home developed in Cinestill D9 1:1 | 9:15min @ 104F | AGO Processor
Here are photos of my custom Keef Telecaster build, from many years ago.
The neck pup is a Gibson Burstbucker One humbucker; the bridge pup is a Don Mare pedal steel wind single coil. It screams. The middle position is totally killer.
Swamp ash body with Gibson red to gloss black sunburst, painted by me with rattle can lacquer. Came out pretty good! All the wear and tear is 100 percent legit.
Warmoth Strat neck, compound radius, on a third-party Ash body; jumbo frets. Callaham "vintage" tuners, vintage wiring harness, hand-carved bone nut, brass and aluminum compensated bridge saddles (I think they're Glendale; I forget). Glendale bridge plate. All the screws are standard blade, vintage 50s style. This guitar will be in my casket when I'm buried, I will never sell or give it away. It's not a 100 percent correct reproduction of Keith's guitar (I didn't mount the neck humbucker upside down), but sound-wise, it's pretty damn close.
I play it through a Vox AC4C1-12, with the "bright-cap mod." For effects, I stick to some pretty basic stuff: my MXR Dyna Comp compressor (sometimes), a EHX Soul Food overdrive, a Tone City "Tape Machine" delay pedal, and a very cheap Aroma "Ocean Verb" reverb pedal. I usually don't use them all at the same time. I also have a Joyo tremolo pedal, which sounds just like the tremolo on my old Ampeg Reverberocket. One of the great cheap pedals out there ...