Thanks again Stefan.
Your example ran without error. I removed all the images and the code in this post, produces the error. The associated log file is attached.
Regards
Bob
Code: Select all
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\begin{document}
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{\centering
A Paipo Interview in Two Languages - Marcelo Linazasoro Egaña
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The story of Marcelo Linazasoro Egaña and the txampero
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A Paipo Interview with Aitor Linaszoro about Marcelo Linazasoro Egaña
January 26, 2012 and March 27, 2013. Zarautz, Spain
Questions asked by Lázaro Echegaray Eizaguirre. Translation by Javier Arteche and Lázaro Echegaray Eizaguirre.
}
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Marcelo Linaszoro is one of the few documented manufacturers of the wooden bellyboards ridden across the Basque coasts of northern Spain and southern France. The wooden bellyboards were called txamperos and plankys. A hallmark of the Linaszoro design was rounding the tail of the board, adapting it to the waist of the surfer and thus making it more ergonomic and easy to use. Txampero boards were ridden from at least the 1950s and into the 1970s, gradually disappearing from the beaches and being replaced by surfboards and boogie boards.
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\section{Information about Marcelo Linazasoro and the canoe?}
He started as a carpenter at the Balenciaga Shipyard in Zumaia. I think the lamp was lit there to make rustic, but very strong canoes. The first canoe he made in Zumaia was a single-seater.
In the year 1940, he came with his family to Zarautz to live and work as a carpenter. In the free hours and weekends, he made canoes with help of the entire family. Aproximately 9 two-seaters and 3 single-seaters were built. They were made with wooden ribs of Acacia, the North Pine slats fastened with galvanised ends and studs and canvas lined with linseed oil and then painted in different colors, red, green, blue, yellow, white and many more. With all this equipment with corresponding beechwood oars, he mounted a stall on the waterfront close to the small Munoa [a place in Zarautz] which was painted with vertical blue and white stripes, with the objective of renting canoes.
The first canoe he made in Zumaia is now in Beobide's sculpture art museum in Zumaia [Museo Taller de Julio Beobide-Kresala].
Replica of Marcelo Linazasoro's canoe in the Beobide Museum. The canoe is 3 metres x 0.86 m (~32 foot x 3 ft.). Photos by Manual Beobide, courtesy of Alain Gonfaus Martinena.
\section{Information about Marcelo Linazasoro and the txampero?}
With all this on-going, he considered something was missing in Zarautz's beach for the young and small people. He looked in Donostia, Fuenterrabía, and Biarritz and came up with two new ideas, the piraucho from Donostia and a curved plank which is called the txampero.
The piraucho is oval-shaped with the exterior made of canvas and the interior of rubber tube. Both sides could be used in the water.
Txampero. Marcelo made a rough copy by producing double templates with its curvature. To make the txamperos he used 3-ply water-resistent wood glued with Kasko glue, clamped together and left to harden for 24 hours. Later he cut them out giving them their particular shape. Initially with a straight back (tail), Marcelo later curved the tail for better support. Finally they were sanded and given two coats of varnish. [See Note 1.] \footnote{}
The txamperos were sold in sports stores in Hondarribia, San Sebastian and Zarautz. Some copies were made by a sports equipment company in Zarautz.
Deck and bottom view of the txampero. According to his family, the curved tail was Marcelo's innovation to differentiate his boards from copies. The French boards that Marcelo saw had square tails. Photographs by Gavin Randall of Traditional Surfing UK.
Nose and tail close-up. Photographs by Gavin Randall of Traditional Surfing UK.
Photos from the workshop - txampero mold. Echegaray Eizaguirre, Lázaro, and Mikel Troitiño Berasategi. 2007.
What the waves brought in: a history of surfing in Zarautz. Zarautz:
Ayuntamiento de Zarautz, Departamento de Cultura.}
Photos from the workshop - txampero mold. Echegaray Eizaguirre, Lázaro, and Mikel Troitiño Berasategi. 2007. What the waves brought in: a history of surfing in Zarautz. Zarautz: Ayuntamiento de Zarautz, Departamento de Cultura.}
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\section*{Notes}
Additional Information.
Marcelo's txamperos was made with three 2 mm plywood sheets. The txampero thickness was 8 mm because Marcelo used a special weather resistant glue, called "cola de barco" (boat glue) and also a kind of paste made with breadcrumbs or flour which is very good for the water. So this paste and the glue make up the other 2 mm. (Echegaray Eizaguirre, Lazaro, e-mail message to Bob Green, March 27, 2013.)
Note 1: Phillipe Zibin from Reunion was in France in October 2012, and spoke with the French surfboard building pioneer Jacky Rott. Jacky built plankys/txamperos from the 1950s. He was shown a photo of Marcelo's press and recognized it. He still has his. He commented that the Spanish boards were 4 ply, he used 5 ply.
\end{document}