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DEVELOPMENT GROUP










DEVGRU
The DEVGRU Spec has been initiated by Syndicate to clearly define all product technology and house the feature benefit story. As materials, applications, impact/boardfeel technologies evolve at VANS they will be researched and developed thoroughly then given the DEVGRU specification so skaters clearly know what they are getting.























TNT II Mid Cup "S"
- Outlast® temperature regulating linings that keep the foot cool when it's hot/muggy and warm and dry when
it's cold and raining outside. VANS is the first company in the industry to use Outlast® in skateboard shoes.
- EVA midsole heel cartridge. Lightweight heel protection.
- BoardFeel XD construction. Best balance of feel, durability, and grip. (Molded “waffle” cupsole)
- PU footbed with ImpactSorb™ Durable cushioning that prevents heel bruising.


DEVGRU/Ballistic Cordura
- TecTuff Bulletproof Leather overlays. Weartest approved.
- CORDURA® underlays: "How a uniform performs is crucial to a soldier’s success on the battlefield. And it all
begins from the ground up – with boots that can handle everything and anything. Desert heat. Mountain snow.
Swamps. Marches. Combat. The unpredictable. The unimaginable. Military boots made with CORDURA®
fabrics have been there and done it all - with exemplary results. Battle-tested and proven, they’re rugged,
comfortable and absolutely necessary."


DEVGRU/Crye Multicam
MultiCam® is a single camouflage pattern designed to help the wearer hide in varied environments, seasons,
elevations, and light conditions. It was designed to address the real-world need for concealment in different
environments, with one basic kit of gear. While there are many great location-specific patterns,
MultiCam®
is designed to work well across a very broad range of environmental conditions when observed in both the
visual and near Infra Red (night vision) spectrums.

The design takes advantage of the way the human eye/brain perceives shape, volume and color. Since
only a very small portion of the human eye perceives color, the brain does a lot of “filling-in” for the eye.
MultiCam’s® unique design takes advantage of this principle and helps the observer to “see” the pattern
as part of the background. This helps the wearer's profile begin to loose its edge and fade into whatever
color or shape surrounds him. It works on the principle that an observer can see something but still not
recognize it as anything to be interested in.

- Crye MultiCam® 1000 Denier Nylon Cordura: The heaviest fabric Crye offers. It's great for packs and pouches
and other applications where heavy wear is the norm. This material is urethane coated on the back for water
repellency.
- Duracap™: Under the toe cap and ollie area, Duracap™ backer ensures that once you skate through the
upper fabric the life of the shoe is not over. A thin rubber sheet, propietary technology to VANS, that has been
proven as the ultimate ollie protection.



Syndicate/DEVGRU Spec

ROLL FOREVER

Another Andy Kessler Quote

I grew up surfing in California.  It's hard as fuck to learn, even when you're a hell bent little kid.  I can't imagine how frustrating the learning process must be for an adult.  Hence I give Andy a lot of respect for getting his old, battered body into the water as often as he did.

The weekend before he passed, we surfed a bunch together out in Montauk.  One afternoon was particularly good; clean and consistent with overhead sets.  We walked east from the dirt lot at Ditch Plains and decided to paddle out by the big rock.  Kessy hopped in first and I knew immediately that we'd misjudged the current and that he was fucked.  As he got sucked closer and closer to the rock, I adjusted my entry accordingly and managed to make the lineup fairly easily.  Poor ol' Kess was getting his head beat in.  I turned to see him on the verge of making it out, only to be annihilated by a set wave.  I could hear him screaming in frustration while I laughed my ass off and paddled into a good right hander.  I swear he paddled for 40 minutes straight before giving up.  He was literally beaten back to the shore.  I remember thinking, "Oh well, it's too big for him."  I was bummed cos the waves were really good and it would've been fun to surf together.  However, an hour or so later he came paddling up to me with a big smile on his face.  Said he'd sat on the beach, caught his breath and thought, "Fuck you Farmer, you're not getting all those waves without me!"  Classic Kess determination.  Definitely a favorite memory of mine, trading waves in front of the flag pole after seeing him take that beating.
-Tony Farmer

Andy Kessler Quotes

There are many fond memories of my time with Andy...but here's one that resinates in the brain.

Years ago, while on a photo shoot in Montauk NY, I had let Andy know the location of the estate where we were shooting at for Glamour Magazine in case he wanted to come by and say hi. Mid shoot, Andy rolls up in his pick up truck, surfboard in the back, shirtless, in board shorts waving and shouting with a huge beaming smile across his face "hi Ali-girl!!"

Of course his magnetic energy was flowing and naturally the shoot came to a stand still, the client gasped. I explained to the crew with burning cheeks, "That sweet, handsome man over there is my friend, the one, the only, Mr. Andy Kessler, King of NY, please do not be alarmed."

After the shoot, the photographer invited him along for the crew dinner. Andy gleefully accepted and said he would be the honored tour guide for the evening and proceeded to charm the pants off the models. It was epic, as well he got a free meal out of it!

After dinner Andy and I drove to a cliff to check out the ocean and he said to me he had "found a slice of heaven, right here in Montauk," it's where he felt at peace.
-Ali Gallagher

Andy is one of the first people I met when I moved to NYC. He gave me some shit and I respectfully gave it right back to him. Like most true New Yorkers Andy had a world class bull shit filter. Since Andy’s passing it has been amazing seeing all of his friends come together to honor and remember him. I really wish Andy was here to see the beauty of this. That may seem like something to say when you can’t think of anything original to say. But in this case I think its the best way to describe the beauty of how Andy is living on.
-Moose Huerta

In 1997 Andy had just finished the 108th St. Skate park project. We were finishing up the steel on the vert ramp and were ready to skate. Andy and I got to talking when we took a break. We talked often about all sorts of topics from art to music to how we were bad kids. I had known Andy for about 8 years by this time. I was upset mostly about my girlfriend wanting me to move out and where would I go? We sat and talked about relationships that afternoon in Riverside Park. We talked about the good, the bad and the ugly of relationships and how you never know what is going to happen, we talked about respect and honor in friendships. One week later I was homeless. I went to 108 to skate with a huge chip on my shoulder. Andy noticed, he wanted to know what the f**k was wrong with me and I had told him I had no place to go. Andy told me he was going to Spain (or was it Australia?) and he needed someone to watch his apartment while he was gone and feed the cat. He had all sorts of old friends he could tap into for this. He offered it to me because he knew I needed a place to stay and get my crap together. He needed a house sitter. It was the best thing a friend ever did for me. In that month I reflected, saved money, helped out at 108 in his absence. When he got home he shook my hand, gave me a hug and asked if everything worked out. It did indeed. Andy saved my life with his generosity. I will never forget what he did for me. He will be my Brother forever! That is one of my many Andy stories.
Andy R.I.P.
-Eddy Calabritto

Kessler was the guy who made Riverside skatepark happen (108th and Riverside) in the 90's in NYC there we no legit skateparks and he paved the way for so much of what we have to skate today. From the legal use of the Brooklyn Banks to the park that they are going to build in Flushing- none of this would have probably been possible if Andy never busted his ass to get Riverside done. He toppled the first domino and it's up to us to keep them falling. He's an inspiration to us all.
-Steve Rodriguez

Andy Kessler was the undisputed Godfather of NYC skateboarding end of story. Every skater in the history of NYC skating is indebted to him whether they know it or not. I am proud to have been a friend of his for 30+ years.
Andy Kessler was truly the last of a dying breed. Rest In Power my friend!
-Dante Ross

Kessler always seemed like an old workhorse. One of those New York characters who you see roaming the streets forever. He was salty and hard-boiled like a true New Yorker should be but he was also the first guy to help someone out. I don’t mean that as a cliche like when someone dies they were all of a sudden a saint- no- Kess really helped people out. He was a sponsor to people trying to kick drugs or drinking, (he was clean and sober for years and years and then one day he quit drinking coffee and smoking cigs to boot!), he built skateparks, went to community meetings and generally tried to make New York a better place to live.
He was not all sugar and spice though. While we were making the film “Deathbowl to Downtown” he constantly gave us shit and was the biggest pain in the ass imaginable. He demanded to read all the narration that concerned him or his scene and he would rip it to shreds if it didn’t meet his “bullshit test”. We had to fly him out to our studio in LA to watch the cut before we could screen it publicly. Basically he felt responsible for any story about the evolution of skating in New York because if we got the origins wrong (which he was a key part of) then we would get the whole story wrong. It was a pain in the ass at the time but I feel good knowing the final cut of the film was up to his high standards- the old fucker even jerked a couple tears at the screening.
Of course I will miss him but he left behind a lot to remember him by and now I even have a chance to walk in "his shoes"!
-Buddy Nichols

It’s crazy that I still get so emotional when I think about Andy. I'm scrambling to take hold of the strength of this situation instead of being frightened of this world without such a major support in my life. I worry about the majority of my friends but never him. I looked up to him like a father/mentor/dirty old man/peer and every other word to describe a family member in this town. To the good times, past and future! I am a better person from having Andy in my life and hope he is watching over me in death as he was in life.
-Amy Gunther

I met Andy when I was about 14 on Long Island where I grew up, he was out there to build a 6 foot mini ramp at a recreational center in my town, when me and my friends got wind that there was a ramp being built we were there every day to help. My first impression of Andy was he was tough, he just told me to grab a hammer and start taking the nails out of this plywood so we can get this thing built. It took about a week or so to put the ramp together and in that time we all got to be friendly. After that I saw Andy here and there when I would skate in NYC, but I didn't really get to know him until I moved to Manhattan when I was 18. I was skating around downtown one day when I ran into Andy, he said to me "Long Island"? I said "yeah", he said "What are you doing in my city"? I didn't know what to say so I said nothing. From that day I developed a friendship with Andy that I had a huge respect for. We ended up skating together a bunch, even traveling together on a few occasions. That's my most memorable story: "What are you doing in my city"?
-Max Price

My brother Tino and I had just moved to NY from Vermont. More specifically we moved from our real home, Cutting Edge skate park in Bennington VT. Since times were not so shredding at home we spent every second at the skate park. The owner Nick Pedimontie and his wife Jannie were like parents to us.

Living in NY took a lot of getting used to. There were tons of spots to skate all over the city. NY was like a gigantic skate park and we had the most exciting time of our lives finding our way around NY via skate spots. But it still didn't feel like home. When we heard word that a skate park was being built on 108th and Riverside we were up there in minutes. It took a while to find, ‘cus riverside park is friggin’ huge and no one bothered to put up any signs about the new skate park. Finally we see a familiar sight of a vert ramp and street course covered in brand new, light blue, sheet metal. "FUUUck YEEAhhh" except there is a giant fence up around the whole park. Not a problem for a couple of bros who are starving for some transition. Half way over the fence to Shangri La we hear "Oh hell NO ! Get the Fuck down! Now!" Out walks this little greaser dude from some kinda weird lookin’ office in the park. The office looked like a metal box or train car and the little greaser dude looked like the "Fonz" from Happy Days. We are stoked he is not a cop but he has this weird way of squinting at you while he yells at you that makes you feel much shorter than he is. After making us feel like dicks for the attempted sesh he says park opens next week and not to come back until then.

So of course we show up the next day. And of course we are met with some very colorful commentary from the greaser. He looks at us and says, "Forget it! What did I tell you guys yesterday? What the fuck is wrong with you two? Mommy and daddy can't buy their way in to this place. You have to wait just like everybody else." Then to make it worse the greaser pulls out a board and starts skating the park all by his lonesome. I remember thinking, "Fuck, this dude skates!" I thought he was a construction workin’ watchdog. The next day we show up and there is a small crew of people skating the vert ramp. This looks promising until we see the greaser with his helmet on squinting at us on from the deck of the ramp. A slur of obscenities starts flying as he comes over to the gate. But this time he is opening the gate, prolly to beat us up I think. We stand there as the gate opens and he waves us in but still looks like he wants to kill us. We walk in and now he looks like he's more mad at himself for letting us in.

We get to the deck of the vert ramp and see a familiar face. Jim Murphy who used to skate with us at the Cutting Edge was smiling and says, "I see you guys met Andy." Murph is undoubtedly the reason we are getting in on this sesh. We skate all day and for the first time in a long time we feel like we're at home. After the sesh everyone is hangin’ on the flat bottom takin’ off their gear and Andy tells the rest of the crew what a pain in the ass me and Tino are. But a lot of them just look at us as to say "good work fellas." So we decide to show up just about everyday for the next couple months.

Over the next couple months we get to know Andy we see it's not just us. He likes to mess with people a little bit. Also he doesn't give anything way. Everything thing is earned with Andy especially friendship. We even got to take Andy to the Cutting Edge with us before it closed. Needless to say he loved the park and our friend Nick. And I am so glad to that my brother and I had met Andy Kessler this way.
-Marc Razo

WARRIORS, COME OUT TO PLAY


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AN INTERVIEW WITH JP PLUNIER OF FEAL MOR CLOTHIER & EVERLOVING RECORDS

"Some things are everything. Some things are just what they are."




THE APPROACH
It’s like jazz. It’s not about copying. It’s about interpreting things. In this case, you are not making a shoe that doesn’t exist. You’re using what you are exposed to in order to create something fresh that draws a pure line. At the end of the day it’s just a shoe, but can there be a deeper connection? That’s what this opportunity is for.

THE CAMOUFLAGE
This is the world’s rarest camouflage. It comes from a French Marine Commando smock out of Indochina. There are pictures of it in Dr. J.F. Borsarello’s book “Camouflage Uniforms of Asian and Middle East Armies” and these dudes look just amazing. The “Commandos de Marine” were formed during World War II and (fundamentally) based on the British commandos. During the French Indochina War (1946–1954) the French used commando units extensively and the unit this jacket was assigned to are designated “marine” - a French word for “naval” - meaning they had amphibious capabilities and then later on underwater capabilities - very close to an UDT level (Underwater Demolition Team – a precursor to the U.S. Navy SEALs). They were a legendary corps and wore the green beret “British” style with badge to the left (opposite of the French way to the right).


In this seminal period of camouflage development it got really modern by becoming ancient. The influences came from as far back as the colonial wars and the American Revolution where the Americans were dressing like Woodsman, Trappers, and Hunters to blend in for forest/jungle warfare against the British “Redcoats”. By WWII, the switch had been completely made and the first actual camo patterns emerged. This pattern in particular is very primitive and painterly. The colors on the inside pockets of this smock which we worked off of for the first round sample version of the shoe are a really deep chocolate brown against an almost Christmas tree "turn of the century" evergreen with a touch of blue and a cream colored background. So, it was kind of funky. I certainly think the aged version we eventually went with is incredible. We can take the shoe and jacket and put them neck and neck to see that our iteration is really close to the original. The Syndicate team really threw down and made it happen.

THE MESSAGE
The inscriptions on the shoes are combined from elements of the various commando units. The motto “A La Vie, A La Mort” - “To Life, To Death” came from the Ponchardier unit. The "Tigres Noirs" (Black Tigers , Commando 24) wore black head to toe and their leader’s name was Vanden (similar Vans Shoes). He basically started what we now know as SF mixed indigenous forces (locals with advisors) of which the direct descendents were units such as the Sog units in the US-Indochina conflict. One of his reputed tactics was to get captured only to infiltrate and do damage from the inside. The Black Tigers mission at Nim-Binh to recover the body of a general’s son is surely as good an example of the complexity and tragedy of war. Haiphong was the site of the beginning of the war when its harbor was bombed by the French navy. For a little R&R (rest and recreation) our paras and marine commandos might have gone to Vat-Chay so the motto then was “A La Vie” – “To Life”.


The other mission on the shoe is “Operation Castor”. Ill fated, the operation turned out to be “Dien Bien Phu” – “The Last Battle”. The French parachuted a ton of soldiers into this valley, but the Viet-Minh eventually had them bogged down and surrounded. They totally out maneuvered them with ingenuity and determination. By lugging weapons on bamboo poles and pushing their bicycles loaded with baskets of mortars and shells into this deep and remote jungle canopy then laying in wait they created a death vise. After long and a siege of mud and blood the French troops, who had not been short on heroics but in the end were badly led, were done. “Operation Castor” was “A La Mort” – To Death.

THE DETAILS
Not to be neglected is the fact that the French and Vietnamese wore tennis shoes in this war. The rubber stamp on the heel and the top rand that goes around the sidewall are all derived from that origin. Inspired, not copied.

THE WAY
I've had family members in the military so I’ve always been sensitive to that and what it means. With collecting camouflage there’s an aesthetic part and there’s a historical part, but there’s a patriotic element to it as well. Defending the flag. I spent the early part of my life living and traveling in Southeast Asia: Sri Lanka, Thailand, Vietnam, Hong Kong, India and Japan. In 1968, I was living with my family in Thailand. The French Indochina War had ended and the Americans, taking their turn in fighting the Vietnamese, were just getting deeper. Young guys, in their early thirties, who were vets of the “Indochine” conflict were still around and friends with my Dad. Being eight or nine years old I was influenced by them. All ex paras, to me, they were superhero adventurers.

There was one guy in particular, Pierre Darcourt, who had had an amazing life. Indochina was a French colony and he had grown up around Saigon pre-war and spoke Vietnamese fluently. Then WWII broke out so at fifteen years old he went to Poona, India and joined the British S.A.S. Assigned to Force 136 after training in Sri Lanka, he was deployed back to the South East Asian front. A tough guy, he then fought in the war against the Viet-Minh, then in Algeria and later went on to have advisor roles and so on. Long story short, he went back to Vietnam in the 1960’s to cover the war with the United States as a “grand reporteur” - a kind of war correspondent with big picture depth. He came in to writing with that unique guerilla warfare experience, local knowledge perspective and as a real authority. Pierre could identify all of the subtle details other writers missed and communicate with the varied participants on a deep level. To this day he remains an influence and a friend.

In '67-'68 I moved to Thailand from Sri Lanka (then Ceylon) and came in contact with G.I.’s and their kids. This was my first exposure to America - the AFRTS (American Forces Radio and Television Service) playing the “stars and stripes”, riding a Schwinn “Sting Ray”, reading Archie and Marvel comics, Surfer magazine and Rolling Stone. This was an experience a normal French kid would never have had known. A weird set of interests took root - camo, blend in surf and then music. The same thing I am doing today. To be able to follow that all of the way through allows certain purity and an opportunity to meet people that are trying to do the same thing. We are living the dream as much as we can. These are the people that I end up working with and whether it’s surfboard visionaire Robbie Kegel of Gato Heroi or you guys, it’s pure. It’s about being as close to that as you can.



THE ROAD
I am in the van with a new band, “The Growlers”. That’s the bottom line. I am back to ground zero on ground zero stuff. We were in Portland, Oregon and after the previous nights show they were going through some dumpsters and found wigs, dresses, whatevs and changed into them right there and then. After breakfast at a strip club, they went and got some beers and we drove to Seattle. They’re fresh and out of control. I love it. It’s raw. They’re not unreal. . .they’re surreal! This is just who they are. It’s a pure moment and we are in it. That’s what I am looking for.

THE SEA
"Feal Mor" is a saying in Breton, a Gaelic derived language, meaning "faithful to the sea". The sea is its own entity. Despite territorial waters, it’s a nebulous world and nobody owns it. Throughout history, man has gone there to be free and being loyal or faithful to the sea means not so much defending it, but defending your own freedom. I have a big connection to people who surf for the reasons that I think are core. They love the sea. They make their own shit and try to find the pure line. It doesn’t need to be more than that.

THE WORLD OF S/DOUBLE / 011