Art in living colour at tattoo show

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Art in living colour at tattoo show

Monday, 03 November 2008

MAARTEN HOLL/The
NEEDLE WORK: Don McClintock, 54, who `never liked tattoos’, was named overall winner of the Lower Hutt Charity Tattoo Show yesterday.

Ittakes seven years and $70,000 to get a body like Don McClintock's. He also won the best tattooed arm, back, leg and full body sections as he stormed his way to the $1000 winner's cheque at Lower Hutt Town Hall.
The 54-year-old was named overall winner of the Lower Hutt Charity Tattoo Show yesterday.
"Then I had Lady Luck tattooed on, so our luck would change, and the whole thing just took off from there.
A family crisis seven years ago resulted in the self-employed joiner from Christchurch having the names of his children tattooed around his neck."
Mr McClintock has lost count of how many tattoos he has, or how long they took his tattooist, Steve Johnson from Downunder-Tattoo, to create. I never liked tattoos before that to be honest."The only remaining parts of his body left to cover are the backs of his feet and areas on his inner thighs. .
The 3500 people at the two-day show also had the chance to watch tattooists, in action, including Ali Reid from ALC Headquarters in Cuba St.
Sarah Munro, 20, from Karori nailed the runner-up spot with her tattoos by Manu Tattoo.
More than $1000 was raised for Life Education Trust.

Rising star one of two killed in crash

Posted on 18th September 2008 by Asia News in news,nz - Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

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Rising star one of two killed in crash

Friday, 19 September 2008

One of the two young shearers killed in a road crash in Central Otago was a rising star in the shearing world.
Police have said speed and fatigue were likely factors in the deaths Southland shearing gang members Stewart Hetaraka Smith, 20, of Mataura and Lavenia Setefano, 19, of Gore.15am when a van containing six shearers rolled on a straight stretch road about 4km east of Poolburn, between Ophir and Oturehua.
They were killed about 6.
Smith andSetefano died at the scene.
All six were thrown from the van when it rolled on a straight stretch of road and came to rest in a paddock. They were two women, aged 17 and 20, from Alexandra, and a 40-year-old man from Masterton.
Three others were seriously injured and flown by helicopter to Dunedin Hospital. The two young Alexandra women were his daughters.
The gang worked for Alexandra shearing contractor Dion Morrell.
"They are fairly well battered and bruised," he said.
Morrell said just before he left for Dunedin yesterday that doctors believed his daughters would pull through.
He said Smith and Setefano were "superb, absolute gems".
Smith, Setefano and the other survivors had worked for him for about two months..
"It's a hell of a loss . As people you couldn't wish for better..
A 36-year-old man from Gisborne was taken to Dunstan Hospital with moderate injuries. They really were cool kids," he said.
He was in three successive finals at Golden Shears in Masterton, was a runner-up in the junior class in 2006, fourth in the intermediate class in 2007 and fourth in the senior class in March this year.
Mr Smith was a promising young competition shearer who had spent two years on the "modern apprentice" programme with industry trainers Tectra.
Detective Sergeant Derek Shaw, of the Central Otago CIB, said he understood neither Smith nor Setefano was driving.
He had started last season finishing second in the New Zealand Spring Shears intermediate final at Waimate in October, before going up to the senior class, and finishing third at the Southern Shears in Gore in February, before heading for Masterton.
No other vehicle was involved in the crash, Shaw said.
No other vehicle was involved in the crash, Shaw said.
He described the crash scene as "horrific and tragic".
Smith was from a prominent Mataura shearing family, and had made the final at the past three Golden Shears competitions.
– With