Mainbreak Carpark
LOCATION: Spot X, Off The South Coast W.A, 29/05/21, 2:06 pm.
CAMERA SETTINGS: Exposure Time: 1/2500 ▫️ Aperture f/4 ▫️ ISO 250 ▫️ Focal Length 250mm ▫️ Camera Fujifilm GFX100
SINGLE EDITION: Aluminium Panel - Shadow Framed Print 134 x 105cm
Museum Quality
Giving your image a 3D floating effect when hanging from the wall, wow people with our aluminum panel - shadow frames, made specifically to create a sleek modern finish that gives fine art depth with a beautiful shadow line around the image behind non-reflective UV glass, meticulously crafted to elevate the presentation of the art.
ABOUT: Since the late 1950s, the waves at Margaret River have drawn people from everywhere around the globe. The town has transformed from a sleepy outpost with dairy and timber enterprises to a thriving community based around wine, tourism, and surfing. The wave has had a lot to do with this evolution. It has drawn all sorts of people into the area. Most have been determined to build their skills so as to be able to live and work in proximity to this great surf break. It’s a powerful, consistent, physically and mentally demanding and energizing wave; a naturally beautiful playground slap bang in the middle of Margaret River’s social fabric.
Bob Pett, who became addicted to surfing Margs with his mate Ian Cairns in the late 1970s observes that ‘Margies is fairly unique because of the number of long-term regular surfers who have made surfing this break and the nearby reefs a focus of their lives, and crafted their livelihoods to accommodate it’.
Excerpt from the book Main Break by Russell Ord / Mick Scott