Not only was the and trademarks in the early 鈥60s, he worked for free. Not because he was young and exploitable, but because he desperately needed to fill ad space for The Surfer鈥攖he rough little 36-page booklet that started off as a promo piece for his , and was later grandfathered in as the debut issue of .
Looking back, the creation of the surf-mag trade in the 1960s seems not so much dramatic as inevitable; it filled an obvious and growing void. There was some risk involved鈥攖he morbidity rate for magazine startups has always been high. But nothing to compare with, say, dumping every penny of your life savings into an experimental polyurethane surfboard blank foam-blowing mold. Full-house crowds at surf movie screenings up and down the coast had already proven the demand for surf-related entertainment. The small but growing number of mainland commercial boardmakers鈥攁lmost all of them conveniently located within a half-day鈥檚 drive on Highway 101, from San Diego to Santa Barbara鈥攃ould hopefully provide a magazine-supporting ad-revenue base. Besides, Americans had already shown they were ready to support their favorite niche sports magazines: and magazines had been around for years.
Finally, in a small but tantalizing development, 33-year-old New York regular-footer John Hammond had just begun to sell his own line of surfboards, and was planning the East Coast鈥檚 first multi-state surf competition. The big, explosive years of the surf boom were still to come. But by late 1959, John Severson, crouched over a grid of magazine artboards laid across the floor of his Dana Point apartment, must have recognized that the auguries for launching a surf magazine were all coming up favorable.
Severson, without question, was the right man for the job. He鈥檇 been surfing for nearly half of his 25 years, and was among the best all-arounders in the sport. Furthermore, he鈥檇 been documenting his experience since the beginning, first with his , then with cartoons, woodblock prints, and paintings. He also played trumpet, formed a barbershop quartet, and pitched for his high school baseball team. As fanatic a wave-rider as ever came down the pike, Severson, unlike most of his peers, didn鈥檛 let the sport crab the rest of his life.
People gravitated toward Severson; he was good-looking and bright, smiled a lot, and had a sense of humor. Art and teaching, he hoped, would together provide a career, and in the mid-鈥50s he received a Masters in Art Education from Long Beach State. . His surfers were elongated, wavy-limbed, and often featureless, and their boards looked like bent daggers. Sometimes the ocean and sky were faithfully rendered in the usual surf-world blues, greens, and whites, but just as often Severson filled the spaces in shifting fields of coral, lemon yellow, or lavender. 鈥淪eal Beach Locals,鈥 his 1956 semi-abstract oil鈥攊n which three surfers watch another surfer bomb down a jagged wave, under a bruised red-orange Cezanne sky鈥攊s sometimes identified as surf culture鈥檚 original work of art.
鈥淚n this crowded world the surfer can still seek and find the perfect day, the perfect wave, and be alone with the surf and his thoughts.鈥
Severson taught for one semester, then was drafted into the army. Arriving at Hawaii鈥檚 Schofield Barracks in 1957, he worked as a military draftsman, hawked three-dollar surf-scene ink drawings to Waikiki tourists on weekends, and most afternoons鈥攁s the ranking member of the newly-formed 鈥攚as given permission to surf. After sending home for his Keystone 16mm movie camera, Severson began filming the local surf action. In the winter of 1958 he edited the Hawaiian footage together with some older rolls shot in California, added some hand-lettered titles, and called the resulting film . The movie cleared just enough money for Severson to buy a new , and he immediately began working on a follow-up movie: came out in 1959, not long after Severson completed his army tour and returned to the mainland. By that time, surf moviemaking could almost be described as a career choice. Bud Browne, the genre鈥檚 deacon-faced veteran, had made a handful of films since 1953; by the late 1950s, he had been joined by Greg Noll, Bruce Brown, and Severson.
As Severson barnstormed Surf Safari along the Southern California coast, he laid out stacks of 8脳10 鈥渇rame grab鈥 glossy photos on the ticket table, priced them a buck each, and was amazed at how many sold. Browne and the rest were also flogging 8脳10 action shots from their own movies, though, so nobody had a marketing advantage there. Same with the handbills. Severson鈥檚 illustrated two-color notices were lively single-panel cartoon surf-dramas, but they had to share space on lightpoles and store windows with handbills posted by other filmmakers. (All were stolen nearly as fast as they were posted; further evidence of the surfer鈥檚 unsatisfied appetite for media.)
Thinking ahead to his next movie, Severson hit upon the idea of a promo booklet. He figured it would be a better value for the customer than 8脳10 photos, and it could give Surf Fever a PR edge over the competition. Publishing wasn鈥檛 a total mystery to Severson鈥攖en years earlier he鈥檇 written for the school paper and been on the yearbook committee. Returning to Hawaii for the winter of 1959-60, he brought a 35mm still camera, as well as his Bolex; on the beach that season, he often set both up, side-by-side, and alternated between them.
Surf Fever came together easily in the winter and early spring of 1960. The booklet was harder. Severson was still thinking of it in terms of a promo item, but as he penciled out a table of contents and started messing with photo arrangements, it began to take on a life of its own. He chose The Surfer as the title from a list of dozens jotted down in a long vertical column in one of his sketchbooks, because the booklet itself was 鈥渕eant to be a surfer . . . on its own ride.鈥
The Surfer wound up looking like a scruffy but earnest art school project, beginning with its horizontal format, grainy cover shot, and hand-lettered logotype. Doodled surf figures glide around the margins. Captions are often set vertically. Lots of real estate on any give page is left unprinted and white. Severson had always liked Doc Ball鈥檚 1946 book , and he鈥檇 intended to make The Surfer a similar all-photo project. It almost came out that way. Most of the features are nothing more than photo groupings with explanatory titles鈥斺淭oes on Nose,鈥 鈥淩incon,鈥 鈥淲aimea Bay鈥濃攁nd brief captions. No competition reports. No editorials, travel stories, interviews, or equipment features. Severson did add a short fiction piece and a 鈥淪urfing for Beginners鈥 article, and the text columns in these two features add just enough ballast to keep The Surfer from floating away. Surf Fever, ostensibly the whole point of The Surfer, has no presence at all except as a back-cover ad鈥攁nd even there it鈥檚 shoved over to make room for one last Severson drawing.
In terms of design, the magazine looks pretty raw, even by that day鈥檚 standard. Opposing pages often don鈥檛 fit together. In a Southern California surf break map, it isn鈥檛 entirely clear which part is land and which is ocean. Half the photos are blurry鈥攁 hard thing to overlook, especially since most of the Ball images from California Surfriders, published fifteen years earlier, are razor sharp. But like the surf films themselves, none of this really mattered. The Surfer was friendly, authentic, and handcrafted. Anything more sophisticated would have been out of synch with what was happening on the beaches, in the surf shops, and at the high school auditoriums where Surf Fever was playing. The sport was still barely commercialized. Severson managed to sell twelve ads for his booklet, to Hobie and Velzy and the rest, but only because he agreed to do much of the ad designing at no extra charge.
Finally, Severson brought the project to a close on an unexpectedly graceful note. A photograph on the next-to-last page shows a lone surfer paddling out toward an empty wave, with the breaking crest throwing up a helix of spray. Two lines of Severson-composed type are set in the lower righthand corner: 鈥淚n this crowded world the surfer can still seek and find the perfect day, the perfect wave, and be alone with the surf and his thoughts.鈥
The Surfer went to press just before Easter in 1960. Still not quite sure if he鈥檇 created a magazine, a promo piece, or a book鈥攖he cover was initially going to be hardbound, but a cardboard stock was switched in at the last minute鈥擲everson in the end ran a contents page subtitle describing The Surfer as his 鈥淔irst Annual Surf Photo Book.鈥 His idea was that he鈥檇 follow up with a second edition in 1961 to go with next year鈥檚 surf film.
Severson聽was in the black, and his magazine, by year鈥檚 end, was a surf institution in the making.
Severson printed ten thousand copies of The Surfer at a total cost of $3,000; the per-unit wholesale cost was $1.00, and each issue retailed for $2.00鈥攑ricey for something not too far removed from a vanity project. Severson and his brother loaded the magazines from the printer鈥檚 dock into John鈥檚 VW van and immediately began hand-delivering them to bookstores and surf shops鈥攚here copies were snapped up like kibble by gremmies who鈥檇 somehow gotten the early word and were actually lined up and waiting.
Sales peaked early, though. Five-thousand copies were circulating by the end of September. Another five thousand were boxed up and gathering dust in Severson鈥檚 garage. Profit from the enterprise was small, but it was enough to convince Severson to scrap the idea of a follow-up annual and to instead publish a quarterly magazine.
It should be noted that Surfer鈥檚 claim to being the original surf periodical is technically untrue. Three issues of Orange County-based , and four issues of a monthly broadsheet called , were published in 1960 before Severson decided to parlay The Surfer into a magazine. Way back there, we find The Surf: A Journal of Sport and Pastime, a one-penny Australian tabloid published in 1917 and 1918 and dedicated to 鈥渢he surfer . . . a gay-hearted, carefree child of Nature.鈥
Severson had been in full bohemian mode while producing The Surfer; with The Surfer Quarterly鈥攍ater renamed Surfer鈥攖he goal was commercial success. He changed the format from horizontal to vertical鈥The Surfer had disappeared on magazine racks behind taller publications鈥攄esigned a new machine-set logotype, and expanded editorial content to include a standard mix of articles, columns, photo features, letters, editorials, and competition coverage. He hired staff. He created discount subscription offers and mailed rate cards to potential advertisers. The new cover price was 75垄鈥攕till pretty steep, considering cost just 20垄. Severson printed five thousand copies of the debut issue of The Surfer Quarterly, and the entire run was gone before the next issue hit the stands. Severson was in the black, and his magazine, by year鈥檚 end, was a surf institution in the making.
When the arrived, Severson was the primary media gatekeeper between trade interests and surfers at large, and he went a long way toward making the transition less crass, if not less abrupt. Not that he was a beacon of purity. Severson in fact was a nimble, tactical, and occasionally fierce businessman. No action was required on his part to eliminate and 鈥攁 pair of clumsy rivals destined to fail鈥攂ut a Santa Monica-published monthly called Surf Guide, which debuted in 1963, brought out the iron fist. Surf Guide was handsome and forward-thinking. It was 鈥渢he most interesting of all the other magazines,鈥 Severson recalled. 鈥淩eally strong.鈥 Enough so that when Surf Guide editor Bill Cleary ran a satire piece in late 1964 poking gentle fun of Surfer and its charismatic owner-publisher, Severson hit back with a million-dollar libel suit. Surf Guide folded two months later. Severson, with the keenest eye for talent in the business, immediately hired Cleary as his new associate editor.
But work never consumed Severson, or at least not in the early going. He kept up as an artist: the cartoon figures that livened up the first issue of The Surfer were deployed for another two years, and his surf movie posters were museum-grade models of composition. 鈥淪urf Bebop,鈥 a semi-abstract painting of two surfers lounging on the beach鈥擲everson鈥檚 finest work as a painter鈥攚as used as a Surfer cover and honored by as one of the best cover illustrations of 1963.
It was an impressive balancing act. There were checks to deposit, meetings to chair, advertisers to court, and Severson did all that. There were also waves to discover and ride, and a drive to present the whole experience to his audience not only through journalism but art. Severson did that, too. Yes, he wanted readers to go out and buy the products advertised on the magazine鈥檚 pages. He also wanted to remind them, in each issue, that what they were doing was beautiful and unique, that it was still a privilege and a calling for the surfer to seek and find the perfect day, the perfect wave, and be alone with the surf and his thoughts.