George Greenough is an innovative surfer and cinematographer from Santa Barbara, California who now resides in Byron Bay in New South Wales, Australia.
He was born to a wealthy family but despised its trappings and spent
most of his time in the ocean. Greenough is best known for creating the
modern surfboard fin. He altered the design from a wide-based, cumbersome keel to a more powerful and efficient dolphin fin-like foil.
In the 1960s Greenough's equipment was distinctly different from the longboard design of the day, and he rode short kneeboards under 5' 5" and air mattresses regularly. He is credited as being the best mat[clarification needed] rider ever, and still surfs the unique waveriding craft. His most famous board was a fiberglass spoon[clarification needed]
using only small amounts of buoyant foam, shaped kneeboard he
christened "Velo". Greenough is also known as a genius level inventor
and the master of fiberglass engineering, design, and construction,
having used the material to build surfboards, camera housings, and
boats.
In the late 1960s and early 1970s, Greenough released two feature films The Innermost Limits of Pure Fun and Crystal Voyager. His footage above and below the water were personally selected by the members of Pink Floyd as the imagery for their "Echoes" film after the group saw Crystal Voyager,
which used the Pink Floyd track as the music for the final sequence of
the movie. Greenough is also featured in an early scene in Bruce Brown's surf film The Endless Summer.
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