How these one-of-a-kind kicks are giving Special Olympic athletes a boost - Action News
Home WebMail Sunday, November 24, 2024, 06:27 AM | Calgary | -12.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
NL

How these one-of-a-kind kicks are giving Special Olympic athletes a boost

Local artist Sailor Danny and St. John's Edge star Carl English created a one-of-a-kind shoe to auction off in support of the province's Special Olympic Games.

Sailor Danny added another painting on top to auction off

One side of the Carl English shoes set to be auctioned off to raise money for the Special Olympics. (Submitted by Trish Williams)

Local artist Sailor Danny makes waves with his paintingsinspired by legendary musicians and local landscapes, while Carl English of the St. John's Edge makes his own splash on the basketball court.

Together the duo have teamed upto auction off a one-of-a-kind pair of basketball shoespainted by Sailor Danny real name Daniel Framptonand to be worn by English to raise funds for the upcoming Newfoundland and Labrador Special Olympic Games in Grand Falls-Windsor.

"Our job is to bring awareness to the lack of funding and the things these special athletes need to travel and to get off the island and take part in the games," English said Wednesday morning at the Browning & Harvey Corporate office in St. John's, wherethe unveiling of the artwork took place.

"The athletes are challenged with enough things to begin with ... and the challenge ofnot being able to get off the island because of lack of funding is shameful."

The Special Olympic Games in Newfoundland and Labradoris home to roughly 780 athletes according to executive director Trish Williams. The organization is a provincial not-for-profit that provides training and competition opportunities for athletes of all ages in both summer and winter sports.

Sailor Danny and Carl English unveiled the creative basketball shoes and two other Sailor Danny paintings on Wednesday for the media. (Danny Arsenault/CBC)

"This is huge for the organization because it creates much-needed funds, but it also creates awareness of the challenges around raising money to support our athletes and their goals," Williams said.

Good challenge forartist

Framptonsaid the shoes were difficult to paint on, but the cause far outweighed any frustration. Each shoe was painted separately one depicting the Special Olympic summer and winter games, the other depicting English at his rustic ocean-side hoop where he learned and mastered the game as a boy.

Framptonthrew in a surprise Wednesday morning during the unveiling of his English shoes: a portrait of the Temperance Street houses in St. John's known as the Four Sisters that will also be a part of the auction.

Daniel Frampton a.k.a. Sailor Danny painted his original work on a pair of basketball shoes to be worn by Carl English of the St. John's Edge and then auctioned off to raise money for the Special Olympics. (Danny Arsenault/CBC)

"I got approached by the Special Olympics to come up with a piece for their fundraising auction and picked out a painting I was going to do for them," he said.

"But then whileI was on the boat I got asked to do some sneakers for Mr. Carl English. It was an interesting challenge, and it was a challenge because they're not canvas by any meansandwe just came together and we did it."

The Special Olympic Winter Games will take place on Feb. 22-24 and March1-3 in Grand Falls-Windsor. The auction in support of the games will be held on April 6.

Read more articles from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador

With files from Danny Arsenault