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AMSTERDAMIZE | 100% Lycra-Free, Guaranteed
AMSTERDAMIZE
100% Lycra-Free, Guaranteed
Cycling Is Officially Chic
Categories: amsterdamize

This blog and this ‘cycling phenomenon’ are so getting out of hand…good! :-p
I really like how the article was setup and Rebecca clearly ‘gets it’. Now let’s hope readers will too.
(Thanks again, Alan, for giving me the headsup)

The bicycle has become the ultimate fashion accessory, but it was chic way before Agyness Dean started riding
Rebecca Nicholson
guardian.co.uk, Thursday September 04 2008 00:01 BST
Article history

Chanels limited edition bicycle, which sold for £6,000

Chanel's limited edition bicycle, which sold for £6,000


With the madness of Fashion Week nearly upon us, one sight is more certain than untouched food at a backstage buffet – Agyness Deyn will be tearing between shows, as usual, on her trusty bicycle. Her fondness of two wheels, documented by countless paparazzi pictures of her cruising through the New York streets, Strokes boyfriend in tow, set enough of a trend for Page Six magazine to declare it “a fashionable pursuit”. Cycling’s not only sustainable, cheap and healthy – it’s officially chic.

Cycle commuting in London has increased by 91 per cent since 2000, and with that comes a natural evolution of style. Last year’s limited edition Chanel bike may have been a ridiculous £6,000, and certainly ill-suited to London’s cycle theft record, but Gucci soon followed with a limited Beijing-themed red model, embossed leather panniers included, which sold in China and Hong Kong for $3,400. Ludicrous, certainly, but also a sign of how fashion is starting to take cycling seriously. (Just ask Vivienne Westwood, a long-time devotee of pedal power.)

But sales of “sit-up-and-beg” bikes were on the up long before Agyness took to her Electra Amsterdam. While they’re easier on the eye than a clunky mountain bike, the explosion of Dutch or vintage style brands like Pashley, Velorbis and Grand 1888 allows cyclists to be more fashionable. They’re slower machines good for leisurely rides – think riding home with flowers in your wicker basket, and you’ll get an idea of the pace. You’re far less likely to work up a sweat on a Pashley than you are on a zippy racer, which means you’re far less inclined to reach for the dreaded Lycra.

This hatred of clichéd cyclewear unites bike-style bloggers across Europe and the US. They share a belief that the stereotype of an aggressive cyclist in Spandex shorts and wraparound shades does a great deal to harm the concept of cycling as simply a normal, everyday means of getting from one place to the next. “There are two major misconceptions,” explains Caz Nicklin, founder of cyclechic.co.uk, an online store and blog for fashion-conscious women on bicycles. “One is that cycling is a geeky pursuit for which you have to be dressed from head to toe in Lycra. The other is that it’s dangerous.”

These concerns show that, despite recent growth, going anywhere by bike is still a novelty in Britain. A million Londoners may own bicycles, but only two per cent of journeys are made using them. We’re still a long way behind the cycle-centric cultures of Amsterdam, Copenhagen, Berlin and even Paris, now, and it’s in Europe that “cycle chic” really comes into its own.

The term was coined by blogger Mikael Colville-Andersen for his site, Copenhagen Cycle Chic, which collects and publishes his daily shots of the city’s most stylish cyclists. He tells of girls in Louboutin heels who seem to stick with “beat-up old Raleigh granny bikes” and how the city’s men are switching to “sit-up-and-begs” like the Velorbis Churchill, but really, he says, “We don’t have cyclists in Copenhagen, we just have Copenhageners who get around on bikes.”

Marc van Woudenberg, who runs the popular site Amsterdamize, supports the idea that fashionable cycling is about being able to wear your everyday clothes to do it. “It’s not for the purpose of cycling, but for the purpose of dressing according to your personality and the occasion, be it work, school, a party, whatever,” he says, adding, “Anything but Lycra.”

And that’s what the boom in “sit-up-and-beg” bikes like the Pashley Princess, the Electra Amsterdam and those beat-up old Raleigh granny bikes will continue to nurture – dressing as you would every day, in Louboutin heels if you like, enjoying your leisurely bike ride.”

  • francois
    LOOK A BUGABIKE DIAMONDS SPECIAL EDITION FOR $12 700. I KNOW WHAT YOU THINK :-),BUT JUST 3 IN THE WORLD.
  • I'm not surprised you've grown into a sensible and lovable woman, Maria :-)

    No problem, I see so many stories pop up, I was glad I was not the only one over there, otherwise it's so tiresome, hehe.

    I'm sure Kate is lovely. These kinds of 'papers' are moved around so much, it's easy to give it more credit than scrutiny. Now she has a red flag. Good. Moving on. :)
  • Maria Gatti
    Thanks for tracking down, and lending your support, in a rather off-putting scaremongering helmet-zealot post on the Montréal blog "On Two Wheels"!

    Actually Kate is very sweet, moreover she has often used material I've supplied about chic cycling, the Claire-Morrissette cyclepath, Claire herself, and athletic events where "cycling kit" is appropriate. But it is really, really important to counteract this propaganda in order to promote cycling, as hearing about kids cracking their heads open understandably scares parents - no matter how the kids are kitted out.

    As a result so many kids (and not only in North America, also in Britain and many parts of continental Europe) don't even cycle to school any more, are chauffered everywhere, and become utterly sedentary if the parents can't afford expensive and time-consuming (for parents) organised games and sport. Causing a lot of death and serious chronic disease.

    I wasn't a sportive kid - I was "dans la lune" and liked to invent stories and paint pictures, and be with myself or some good friends - but I loved to ride my bicycle for hours, and to hike and ramble.
  • lol, Les, you WERE young and impressionable, there were two songs, 1) Fat Bottomed Girls & 2) Bicycle Race. But I can see how they merged into one in your head :-p
  • Les
    Maria - your comment reminds me of an old Queen song: "Bicycle Race" - where fat-bottomed girls made the rock world go round (or something similar). I was young and impressionable.
  • thanks, Maria, and of course I had to mention Mikael for causing all this :-p!

    That song is so cute! Thanks for sharing, now I <del datetime="2008-09-05T00:52:57+00:00"> have to download and maybe use it for one of my future videos</del> have downloaded it and used it for my latest video :)
  • Maria Gatti
    Marc, I'm so happy that the article credits your blog, and Mikael's!

    Don't know if you read French, but I've been listening to a cute song on Radio-Canada: "Lés vélos d'Amsterdam font de beaux culs aux dames" (Amsterdam bicycles give ladies nice bums)

    Tells the story of a fellow whose companion is unhappy because she is putting on weight all over during her pregnancy, (as often happens, except to film stars who stay reed-thin except for their cute "baby bump"), and suggests they take a trip to Amsterdam after the baby is born, putting baby on the baggage rack or in front. Cute little song. And it winds up with Indurain's physique, so what is good for the goose is good for the gander!

    Les vélos d'Amsterdam font des beaux culs aux dames
    À celles qui s'déchaînent et pédalent pas celles qui roulent en auto
    Les vélos d'Amsterdam font des beaux culs aux dames
    À celles qui s'déchaînent et pédalent pour les fleurs et les p'tits oiseaux

    C'est vrai, regarde Indurain comme il est gaulé ! Alors ?
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