The Death of Lycra

May 21, 2013 by  
Filed under Body

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So last week the Wall Street Journal published a piece on the death of Lycra cycling clothing. As if the use of man-made fibers, clipless pedals and shaved legs was one elaborate fad. Or fraud. The Journal doesn’t mind wooing controversy, and this was one of those occasions. The piece, “Cycling’s Spandez Coup d’Etat,” is a piece of work I honestly would have thought  was beneath the publication. Why? Well, it confuses correlation with causation in that there has been an increase of riders not wearing Lycra and Lance Armstrong has fallen from grace. However, Armstrong’s fall did not cause people to huck their Lycra in the trash can anymore than he caused the rise of the hipsters. Then there’s the fact that while the writer cites Rapha as one of the brands selling clothing that subscribes to this new ethos. Nevermind the fact that most of what Rapha sells is, uh, Lycra. Pesky details. Similarly, Giro’s New Road line is an intriguing take on what cycling clothing can be. But it hasn’t exactly achieved the sort of penetration that merits the suggestion that Lycra is on its way out. Ditto for Levi’s.

While Giro’s new line has taken some flack, it’s truly an innovative take on what cycling clothing can be. Will it replace my RKP kit? Um, no. Do I think I could find a place for it in my wardrobe? Absolutely. It’s the sort of stuff I could see me wearing for a coffee ride or for running a bunch of errands by bike, or when heading out for a ride with my son.

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The reader relatively unfamiliar with cycling will probably miss the fact that the only magazine editor quoted—Mia Kohut of Momentum—works for a lovely but tiny publication well out of the mainstream of cycling. Why not talk to Bill Strickland or Peter Flax of Bicycling? Similarly, my friend Josh Horowitz of Broken Bones Bicycle Co. was quoted, rather than anyone from Trek, Specialized or Giant. Josh is a good guy and has a fun take on the bike biz, but if you want to talk to someone who is actually influencing the industry, you’d be well-served to talk to John Burke.

Let me be ultra-clear about this: Using the shallow end of the bell curve as a bellwether for a new norm is just shoddy journalism.

Did Armstrong’s fall make it less fashionable to wear Lycra cycling clothing? Well that begs the question of whether or not it was ever fashionable, to which I have to answer only maybe. There’s no doubt, though, that the water has receded from whatever high-water mark wearing cycling clothing reached in relative hipitude. But what reporter Kevin Helliker misses is the simple fact that for 90 percent of us, Armstrong was never the reason we wore Lycra. We wear it because it works. What would have served both cycling and the reader better is if he’d chased the real story, not the sensationalist BS of projecting the demise of Lycra (which he prefers to refer to as Spandex).

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There is a real story here in how cycling’s numbers are growing, thanks almost entirely to the hipster fixie movement. And it is a movement; we can no longer call it a fad. I’ll admit that you’ll never find me riding a fixed-gear bike in traffic. Why? I want to survive a while yet. You’ll never find me wearing skinny jeans. Why? I’m not skinny. You’ll also never find me growing facial hair for ironic reasons. Why? I’m not funny enough.

That said, I dig anything that gets more of us—and by “us” I don’t mean the us of cyclists, but the us of homo sapiens—out there. And that’s really the bottom line: More cyclists is better for anyone who rides a bike. An increased presence means more facilities, greater awareness on the part of drivers (at least, the ones who aren’t drunk), and more cyclists mean more livable communities. So while Giro has taken some heat for their New Road line, I honestly welcome it. People will ride more and longer if they are comfortable. For new cyclists, the idea that the price of admission means looking like a shrink-wrapped pro bass fisherman is too high for most people who self-select as normal. What Giro is doing has the ability to gradually integrate less-casual cyclists into die-hards of the sport.

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And while we’re on the subject of Giro taking heat, last week also saw the arrival of a new ad campaign by the folks who brought back the lace-up shoe. In response to criticisms that the new Air Attack helmet looks like a skateboard helmet, they went to a skatepark with a road bike, a photographer and, well, let’s call him an acrobat. I’ll be honest and say that I don’t think it does anything to further the stated mission of the helmet—improved aerodynamic performance while still protecting your head—but it shows that they have a sense of humor and can laugh at themselves. Far too many people and companies in the bike industry lack this ability, and while there’s no requirement that you need to laugh at yourself, Giro’s perspective is refreshing. This ability to sit back and look at something critically, objectively is at the heart of the New Road line of clothing. Little wonder that they are responsible for both.

I’ve yet to wear the new helmet, but I’ve been wearing a few of the New Road pieces, a Merino top and the bib shorts and baggy-ish outer short. The fit is good and it’s comfortable. How much more than that is necessary is up for discussion. I’ve had a fair number of friends who understood adventure and a good time, but they’d never ride a bike because in their minds putting on Lycra meant surrendering their manhood at the garage door. I wish stuff like this had been available 20 years ago. It would have made my job at bike shops more interesting, more successful. Had there been a middle ground clothing-wise, I think we could have turned more bike buyers into committed cyclists.

Ultimately, my willingness to welcome Giro’s New Road line, or Club Ride or any of the other forays into this territory comes back to a point I made earlier. Even if they never wear Lycra, more cyclists on the road is good for those of us who choose to wear it. We’re less “other” once we’re both cyclists. More cyclists means better awareness that we’re out there and more acceptance that we have a right to be out there.

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Coming Soon: 2011 North American Handmade Bicycle Show

January 13, 2011 by  
Filed under Machine

The handmade bicycle is enjoying a resurgence in popularity. The last time high-end hand-built frames were this popular … they were all that was available.

Don Walker’s North American Handmade Bicycle Show is the grand daddy of the growing number of shows. It’s still the biggest and best of them, and this year will be the biggest yet. Just today Don announced that the 2011 show, which will be held from February 25-27 in Austin, Texas, boasts an incredible 160 exhibitors, and there’s still some space left. It probably helped that Don selected a city to hold the event that resonates with cyclists.

With the fall-off in A-list exhibitors at Interbike (a trend that frustrates me but that I sincerely hope the organizers turn around), NAHBS this year will be the show I most anticipate attending.

I’ll be posting daily at the event, but much of the work I’ll be doing while there will be on behalf of peloton magazine. There will a bigger announcement on that coming soon.

As of this post, the following companies and builders will be displaying at NAHBS.

  • ALCHEMY BICYCLE CO.
  • ALLIANCE BICYCLES, LLC
  • ANDERSON CUSTOM BICYCLES
  • ANT BICYCLES
  • ANVIL BIKEWORKS
  • APRES VELO
  • ARUNDEL BICYCLE COMPANY
  • BAILEY WORKS
  • BAMBOOSERO
  • BASSO
  • BICYCLE FABRICATIONS
  • BICYCLE FOREST
  • BICYCLE TIMES MAGAZINE
  • BILENKY CYCLE WORKS
  • BISHOP BIKES
  • BLACK CAT BICYCLES
  • BLACK SHEEP FABRICATION, INC
  • BOO BICYCLES
  • BROAKLAND BIKES
  • BROMPTON BICYCLE
  • BRONTO MTB CO
  • BROOKS
  • BURRO BAGS
  • C.C.P.
  • CALETTI CYCLES
  • CALFEE DESIGN
  • CANTITOE ROAD
  • CHERUBIM BY SHIN-ICHI KONNO
  • CHRIS KING PRECISION COMPONENTS
  • CINELLI
  • CO-MOTION CYCLES
  • COLUMBUS
  • CONTINENTAL
  • CRUMPTON CYCLES
  • CURT GOODRICH BICYCLES
  • CYCLE DESIGN
  • CYCLE MONKEY
  • CYFAC INTERNATIONAL
  • DALTEX HANDMADE BICYCLES
  • DARIO PEGORETTI
  • DEAN TITANIUM BIKES
  • DEFEET INTERNATIONAL
  • DELLA SANTA CYCLES
  • DESALVO CUSTOM CYCLES
  • DINUCCI CYCLES
  • DIRT RAG MAGAZINE
  • DOMINGUEZ CYCLES
  • DON WALKER CYCLES
  • DROMARTI
  • ELLIS CYCLES
  • ENGIN CYCLES
  • ENVE COMPOSITES
  • FI’ZI:K
  • FIXED GEAR GALLERY/HELL-YES CLOTHING
  • FORM CYCLES
  • FULL SPEED AHEAD
  • FUNK CYCLES
  • GALLUS CYCLES
  • GAULZETTI CICLI
  • GEEKHOUSE BIKES
  • GIORDANA
  • GJERTSEN TECHNOLOGIES
  • GROOVY CYCLEWORKS
  • GURU CYCLES
  • HAMPSTEN CYCLES
  • HED WHEELS
  • HELM CYCLES
  • HENRY JAMES BICYCLES & TRUE TEMPER SPORTS
  • IGLEHEART CUSTOM FRAMES & FORKS
  • INDEPENDENT FABRICATION
  • IRA RYAN CYCLES
  • KENT ERIKSEN CYCLES
  • KIMORI CO, LTD
  • KIRK FRAMEWORKS
  • KIRKLEE BICYCLES
  • KISH FABRICATION
  • KVA STAINLESS
  • LEGOR CICLI
  • MAIETTA HANDBUILT BICYCLES
  • MAVIC
  • MOMENTUM MAGAZINE
  • MOOTS
  • MOSAIC CYCLES
  • MOUNTAIN FLYER MAGAZINE
  • NAKED BICYCLES
  • NOVA CYCLES SUPPLY INC
  • NUVINCI
  • PAC DESIGNS
  • PARAGON MACHINE WORKS
  • PARLEE CYCLES
  • PAUL COMPONENT ENGINEERING
  • PEACOCK GROOVE
  • PELOTON MAGAZINE
  • PHILOSOPHY BAG CO.
  • PRIORITY CYCLES
  • QUIRING CYCLES, LLC
  • RAPHA
  • RETROTEC & INGLIS CYCLES
  • REYNOLDS TECHNOLOGY LTD
  • RICHARD SACHS CYCLES
  • RITCHEY DESIGN
  • ROLF PRIMA
  • ROULEUR MAGAZINE
  • RPS NIPC
  • SAMURAI CYCLE WORKS
  • SCREEN SPECIALTY SHOP, INC
  • SCRUB COMPONENTS
  • SELLE ITALIA
  • SEROTTA BICYCLES
  • SHAMROCK CYCLES
  • SHEILA MOON ATHLETIC APPAREL
  • SIGNAL CYCLES
  • SIX-ELEVEN BICYCLE CO.
  • SOTHERLAND CUSTOM BICYCLES
  • SPEEDHOUND BIKES
  • SPUTNIK TOOL
  • STRONG FRAMES
  • SUNRACE STURMEY ARCHER
  • SYCIP DESIGNS
  • SYLVAN CYCLES
  • TERRA NOVA CYCLES, LLC
  • THOMSON
  • TI CYCLES FABRICATION
  • TOMMASINI BICYCLES
  • TRUE FABRICATION BICYCLES
  • TWIN SIX
  • UNITED BICYCLE INSTITUTE
  • VANILLA WORKSHOP
  • VENDETTA CYCLES
  • VERTIGO CYCLES
  • VICTORIA CYCLES
  • VP COMPONENTS
  • VULTURE CYCLES
  • WATSON CYCLES
  • WHEEL FANATYK
  • WHITE BROTHERS SUSPENSION
  • WHITE INDUSTRIES
  • WINTER BICYCLES
  • WOUND UP COMPOSITE CYCLES
  • YIPSAN BICYCLES
  • ZANCONATO CUSTOM CYCLES
  • ZIPP
  • ZULLO
  • 2011 NEW BUILDER TABLE EXHIBITORS:
  • APPLEMAN BICYCLES
  • DEMON FRAMEWORKS
  • DORNBOX PERFORMANCE BICYCLES
  • FORESTA FRAMES
  • LITTLEFORD BICYCLES
  • MAGNOLIA CYCLES
  • MILLS BROTHERS BICYCLE COMPANY
  • PITZ
  • RICH PHILLIPS CYCLES
  • ROSENE HANDBUILT BICYCLES
  • VANLOOZEN BROTHERS BICYCLES
  • VIOLET CROWN CYCLES
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