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  • Fashion and yr biking?
  • Malvern Rider
    Free Member

    How important is it to your enjoyment of cycling vs yr ego/social conformity?

    I suppose mine has remained steady at about is 90/10, could be mild aspergers.

    Should you care? Beginning to think I’m a bit odd as never gave a toss (since first bike at 11 yrs old) about what other people think about what age, colour, style of bike, clothes or accessories I purchase or manufacture in order to enjoy many different types of cycling. I have of course chopped and changed with styles/fashions that I believed (sometimes rightly, some wrongly) would improve function – such a shorter bars, longer stem in the 90s. 3/4 lycra bib shorts (imo the most comfortable fit-forget hardcore riding gear through three seasons – and arguably the most unfashionable)

    I wonder how many of us consider ourselves fashionable/’acceptably’ styled in day to day life yet are fully cogent that as soon as we get on a bike then all ‘rules’ are out of the window? (Always remember: Whatever you ride/wear on a bike Clarkson still thinks you look like a tw*t)

    I’m guessing most are about 50/50?

    (Bonus question: If you don’t care what Clarkson thinks, then who’s thoughts do you care for?)

    lunge
    Full Member

    Ultimately we are grown men and women riding bikes. Short of wearing skinny jeans and riding a fixie, we will always be unfashionable to the wider world. However, being fashionable to the cycling world is very different. I tend to choose my kit based on what works though I do at least try not to look to stupid.

    On my road bike I wear Lycra and white shoes. I try and vaguely match the shirts to the jersey but this is not always the case. I will often wear a cycling cap and arm warmers as well. In the cycling world this is acceptable attire, in the real world (as proved by the looks I get when I walk through the station most mornings) I am a freak.

    Off road, I wear baggy shorts, a “technical t-shirt” and silver shoes. This is, from what I see, fairly standard off-road cycling attire and so to fellow cyclists, I look normal. To the real world I’m closer to normal than road wear but I am still a freak.

    neilwheel
    Free Member

    100/0, as in couldn’t give a toss.

    Although i do have Aspergers or ASD as it’s now known and, generally, I’m asocial.

    BigDummy
    Free Member

    I care quite a lot what my bikes, clothing and equipment look like.

    I’m not generally sure whether I’m fashionable, or trying for a style (or if I understand the difference), or whether I’m following a fashion that (I believe) seeks to improve performance.

    My latest bike build, which I think looks amazing, and was carefully specc’ed, custom painted and colour-matched was described by a good buddy as looking “like it was put together by a colourblind person on acid“.

    I’m reasonably content that my combination of mountain-biking awesomeness, road-bike fitness and cargo-bike smugness make me considerably cooler than Clarkson, who is a bell-end. 🙂

    mikewsmith
    Free Member

    I ride what works.

    I was 1x back in 09 and went to baggies long before that. I see the point of 1×11 and full sus. Too many people dismiss development as fashion, their loss.

    Malvern Rider
    Free Member

    “I’m reasonably content that my combination of car-driving awesomeness, couldn’t care-less fitness and 4×4 smugness make me considerably cooler than BigDummy, who is a bell-end.” – Clarkson. 😉

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