United States | Active: 2020s | Known for: Voy10 edits, street skiing, filming, Convoy video credits | Current: independent street skier, filmer and editor
The spots in “rub some dirt on it” do not look polished. They look dragged out of winter leftovers: concrete ledges, wooden handrails, thin snow, small in-runs and the kind of East Coast street setup where a missed speed check ruins the whole clip. Ryan Voyten’s ski identity sits there, between the skier, the filmer and the editor.
Voyten is a US street and park skier best documented through the Voy10 / weastcoat video trail on Newschoolers. His public record does not come from FIS rankings or Olympic start lists. It comes from independent edits, crew projects, filming credits and skier lists where the same people build spots, take clips, shoot each other and cut the final video.
The Voy10 trail appears across several weastcoat uploads before Convoy becomes the clearer recent reference. In 2021, “SMELL YA !!” listed Voy10 first in the rider order and credited film and edit to Voy10. That same year, “big ass freezer edit” included Voy10 among riders in a New Jersey and New York weekend edit, with film/edit credited to “10.”
Those credits matter because they show Voyten as more than a name inside a larger crew. He appears as skier, camera person and editor across multiple small projects. That pattern continues through videos like “teh sting,” “southern hospitality,” “dahn ‘ere in mar’lind” and “WTRP 7 Springs,” where the same Northeast and Mid-Atlantic crew logic keeps returning: indoor-style features, short ski areas, street rails, parking-lot snow and friends trading camera work.
The 2022 “WTRP 7 Springs” upload gives Voyten a clearer regional context. The rider list includes Larson Diianni, Alex Miller, Garrett Marcinak, Drake Hudson, Tyler Stevens, Ryan Voyten, Kevin Butler, Matt Luketich, Wumbo, Sutter Smith, Heanbean, Ryan Miller and Will Alarcon. The description thanks Dan for helping “the yinzers,” placing the edit inside a Pittsburgh-area ski culture reference.
Seven Springs and Wisp are not the same kind of terrain as Park City or the Wasatch rail scene. They force a different kind of creativity: smaller features, tighter weather windows, short approaches and heavy dependence on crew effort. Voyten’s early public video record fits that geography. It is less about perfect park infrastructure and more about making modest spots look worth filming.
“rub some dirt on it,” published in 2024, is the strongest single project attached to Voyten’s name. Newschoolers reviewed it as a multi-year street project and called it Ryan Voyten’s street-skiing directorial debut. The weastcoat listing describes it as a first street video, filmed mainly in Pennsylvania, New York and West Virginia over several winters.
The skier list connects Voyten with George Brown, Robert Starzynski, Julian Orlando, Griffin Gasior, Seb Heaney, Alex Miller, Matt Luketich, Caden Ludwig, Ryan Ritossa, Nate Seymour, Pat Tolan and Garrett Marcinak. The edit credit goes to Voy10. For a ski archive, that combination is the key fact: Voyten was not only appearing in the video, he was shaping the project’s final rhythm.
Street skiing is not only tricks. It is pacing, spot selection, impact, failed attempts, friends laughing between clips and the way a handrail is introduced before the skier hits it. Voyten’s public reputation is tied to that whole package. The Newschoolers review of “rub some dirt on it” pointed to its pacing, soundtrack flow and small moments between tricks as part of the project’s character.
That matters because street-ski edits can easily become a flat sequence of rails. Voyten’s role as editor gives his profile a creative angle that a normal rider-only biography would miss. The skiing still has to work: ledges, kinks, wallrides, redirect-style spots, speed management and landings on thin urban snow. But the edit is what makes the project readable as a film rather than a folder of clips.
In January 2025, “IRRELEVANT - George Brown” placed Voyten in a different role. The Newschoolers listing credits George Brown for the skiing and lists Austin Hilton, Rylie Warnick, DB Falge, Eamon Fischer, Landen Holcomb and Ryan Voyten as filmers. The tags point to rails, street and Park City.
That credit connects Voyten to the wider American street-skiing network around George Brown, Rylie Warnick, Vishnu-linked riders and Park City rail culture. He is not only producing his own regional edits. He also appears in the camera network behind other skiers’ projects, which is often how street skiing actually functions: one crew films another, then the same names reappear in different roles.
“Wheelhouse by Convoy,” published in November 2025, gives Voyten another clear placement. The order of appearance lists Louie Glisson, Milo Nicholson, Landen Holcomb, Griffin Gasior, DB Falge, Ryan Voyten, George Brown, Quinn Noyes and Jesse Mast. The description says it was filmed by the group and edited by Voyten.
That listing shows the same dual role that defines him: skier inside the lineup, editor behind the video. Convoy’s cast also places him beside riders who already sit deep in the current US street-and-park ecosystem. The project’s title and crew framing give Voyten a more collective identity than “rub some dirt on it,” but the editorial role still keeps his fingerprint on the final video.
The verified record supports a street-skiing and ski-film profile, not a contest résumé. No FIS, FWT, X Games or Olympic record was found under Ryan Voyten’s name, and no sponsor relationship should be added without direct confirmation. His profile should stay rooted in the evidence: Voy10 edits, weastcoat uploads, “rub some dirt on it,” filming work on “IRRELEVANT - George Brown,” and the rider/editor credit in “Wheelhouse by Convoy.”
Ryan Voyten belongs on skipowd.tv as a US street and park skier whose value comes from the independent video ecosystem. He skis, films and edits, with a public record running from small Pennsylvania and Mid-Atlantic projects to Convoy-era crew work and Park City-linked filming credits. Future updates should focus on new Voy10 releases, Convoy projects, named street videos and verified sponsor or production credits.