Bespoked 2014 – The UK Hand-Built Bike Show

The organiser’s decision to relocate the 2014 edition of the Bespoked Bristol show to the Lee Valley Velodrome in London gave me the opportunity to visit for the first time. Now in it’s fourth year, and just known as Bespoked, I was impressed with both the size of the show and the range and quality of the bikes on display. Here are a few of the highlights I found:

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BEHIND THE SCENES AT THE VELODROME
Not strictly part of the ‘show’ (and certainly not a hand-built bike) but one highlight was the chance to wander around in the underbelly of the Velodrome and emerge up the ramped access into the middle of the track where the majority of the displays were located. I have tootled around the 30º banks of Herne Hill a couple of times on a road bike before but the vicious 42º rakes here look even steeper from the vantage point that the riders get to enjoy whilst nervously awaiting their event. There were track lessons going on when I visited on the Friday evening and having skin-suited riders clip-clopping around the corridors and flying around the pine boards whilst I got to look at some of the most gorgeous bikes in the country, provided the perfect backdrop and an atmosphere that would be impossible to achieve at any normal trade show venue.
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WITTSON TITANIUM
I got all the way to the back of the infield in my first sweep of the stands and was quickly in danger of suffering from bike overload. Luckily I was slowed by the first thing that really caught my eye: Wittson’s gorgeous Titanium Suppressio frameset. With it’s beautifully engineered in-built seatpost, it really stood out. Wittson are a Lithuanian company who have a long history of making titanium bikes for Colnago and other companies but who are now offering their own custom builds direct to the market. Vitas Zukauskas, who started building frames in the 1990’s after careers as a pro cyclist and coach, was on hand to offer me some delicious Lithuanian waffle as I spoke to his son Mindaugas, who is heading up the return to one-off custom builds. Wittson will make a custom frameset for around £1,700 and deliver it within 30 working days, which judging by other costs and timescales being spoken of at the show is not a bad deal.
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engineered all
ENGINEERED
Bristol-based Engineered Bikes were perhaps one of the few ruing the added journey time need to bring their bikes to London but they were full of praise for the new location and the opportunity to show to a new audience. Designed in the  UK and hand-crafted in Italy, Engineered’s CX Zondag and Criterium Donder showed that aluminium still has a place amongst all the steel and carbon on show. As a rider of alu CX bike myself I was most interested in the Zondag, liking the exceptionally clean lines and the considered graphic treatment. They do a nice line in Tee-shirts too which I have since succumbed to…
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loopwheels
LOOPWHEELS
It’s not all that easy to try out a bike at Bespoked. Apart from the fact that you get the sense that the paintwork may not yet be quite dry on more than a few of the steeds on show, there is the other issue that they are often ‘someone else’s bike’ and just back on loan to the builder for the show. I did manage to get a whizz round on something though, courtesy of the folks at Loopwheels. I’ve been to a couple of shows now where I’ve seen something in the flesh that had been doing the rounds on Kickstarter some months earlier and Loopwheels is one of those. It’s heartening to see that products are finding the funding to take them to development level and are now out there, in the real world, promoting their ideas.
The Loopwheel company are just a year old and is the brainchild of designer/owner Sam Pearce. It’s a really simple concept: suspension forks only work in one direction so why not integrate suspension into the ‘spokes’ of the wheels so they work at all angles. This ‘tangential suspension’ produces a smoother ride and minimises road buzz. Currently only available in 20″ and suitable for Dahon bikes, they look great and will be really popular if Loopwheels can get the pricing right and work closely with manufacturers to get them included at point of sale. I took a Loopwheeled Dahon for a spin around the stands and, even on the smooth surface of the Velodrome infield, could feel the suspension working really well. It would be great to be able to try them out in the real world for a while and I’ll be badgering Loopwheels for a test rig to try.
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the time machine
OAK CYCLES
One of the bikes on the Oak Cycles stand produced a comedy double-take and mid-sentence stumble from me as I went past. I have followed the protracted story of this particular bike’s birth on a cycling forum for many, many months and unexpectedly seeing it in the flesh was quite a shock. ‘The Time Machine’, a lightweight Di2 equipped mountain goat that can double up as trailer-hauling tourer and all-weather rouleur, had been in perfectionist builder Ryan McCaig’s workshop (which is the proverbial stone’s throw from the velodrome) for so long that the name – actually derived from the Penguin Classic book cover colour schemes which the owner has a penchant for – was beginning to become self-prophecising. It has to be said that the outcome was worth the wait though as the bike is quite stunning and exactly what the customer had wanted at the outset. Ryan, a very tall American who has found his home in East London, spoke earnestly about the build, reminding us that a hand-built custom build is just that. Built by hand, utterly unique and as well as being a labour of love and skill, each one is journey of discovery and adventure for the frame-builder.
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PEGORETTI & FESTKA PAINT
There were many excellent paint-jobs at the show but the two which stood out for me were a quiet Pegoretti on the Mosquito stand and a super loud frame over at Festka. The Pegoretti was deliberately Lo-Fi with simple finger and palm prints occasionally decorating the frame around a logo that had been hand-stamped like a potato print. The imperfections in the paint were what really brought this one to life for me. In contrast the Festka was a highly finished composition of bold, bright patterning that screamed for attention and got it in bucket-loads. Both approaches worked brilliantly.
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ahearne
AHEARNE
There were quite a few frame-builders over from Oregon this year and I spent a bit of time talking with Joseph Ahearne, who was displaying a mirror-polished stainless touring bike complete with eating-fork headbadge and a hip-flask located at the bottom of the down tube. Even at somewhere north of $21,000 it wasn’t the priciest bike at Bespoked (the gold-plated bamboo bike over at Veloboo took that accolade I think) but I was impressed that Joe had ridden it out to Epping Forest a couple of days before and somehow still managed to get it back to concourse condition in time for the show. Some of the bikes on show felt like art pieces but I think that bikes should always built to be ridden and Ahearne showed that, so long as you are prepared to spend a lot of time with the cleaning cloth, you can have the best of both worlds.
UPDATE – this bike is in LookMumNoHands on Old Street at the moment – Go and see it!
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cherubim
CHERUBIM
My favourite frame at the show was a Cherubim ULI from Japanese builder Shin-Ichi Konno Cycle Works on the Kinoko Cycles stand. Everything about it, from the rich metallic mid-blue paint, the elegant lines and the retro decals, was simply perfect.
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tsubasa
TSUBASA CARBON
A real head-turner these ones. Sat on a few straw bales in the middle of the show were three densely black frames that initially appeared to be a rough grade iron which looked as if they had just come out of a medieval blacksmiths forge. A closer inspection revealed that they were hand-built, ‘Single Piece Technology’ carbon fibre, all made in a kitchen in Hackney by Ed Vavilovas. Tsubasa means ‘wing’ in Japanese and the frames are monolithic structures, built up as jointless entities, which Ed claims is a unique concept. There is an equally deep intellectual process bound into the frames that runs through the photocopied A4 sheet that serves as Tsubasa’s brochure. Not everyone’s cup of tea no doubt but a very refreshing approach.
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nerve carbon
NERVE BIKES
There is something hugely exciting about asking how many frames a company have made and hearing the answer “Just these two.” Brighton based Nerve Cycles, who brought two very good-looking custom bikes (one stainless steel and one carbon fibre) to the show, are so new that they don’t even have a website yet. Calling on F1 expertise for the carbon and master frame builder Mark Reilly’s experience for the steel, the showbikes looked to be well balanced and very finely finished. We’ll be following up on their progress with interest. 
Twitter:@nervebikes

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DOWNLAND FRAME BUILDING COURSE
Being surrounded by all this hand-built goodness inevitably leads the visitor to think about trying the much-mystified art themselves. I was no different and soon found myself lingering at the Downland Cycles Frame-Building Course stand in the very centre of the show. They had thought through their sales pitch perfectly by having people who had done the course acting as their reps and I got chatting to a German guy who had recently done their short course with his dad. “And this is the bike I learnt to build” he said, pointing at an elegant frame that had both lugged and fillet-brazed joints and which didn’t look too far out of place amongst the cream of the UK handbuilder’s work. Based near Canterbury in Kent, Downland offer courses of various length for all levels and have board and lodgings options available so all you have to think about is your angles and keeping your welding arm steady. It’s on my wish list for sure..
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THOUGHTS ON THE SHOW:
Even the quickest of looks through the studio shots taken by Bespoked’s photographer, Ben Broomfield, showed me how much I missed in the three hours that I had for my visit. The photos are well worth checking out as they capture the great range of bike types and styles that were on show and pick out loads of the amazing details that have been lovingly and ingeniously incorporated into them. The buzz of the show and the chance to meet and talk with the people who build the bikes is fantastic but you do sometimes need to take the bikes out of the melee and place them against a neutral background to really appreciate them. It must have been really hard for the judges to make their decisions.
Organiser Phil Taylor was really pleased with the whole weekend: “The show went amazingly well. When he best makers of the finest bicycles in the world get together to talk to people who understand the level of skill and craftsmanship on display a unique atmosphere is created. This is what makes Bespoked such a great place.” I asked him what his highlight was and, in the best tradition of a parent being asked to choose between his children, he chose them all. “After a year of planning, seeing everything set up and meeting the exhibitors, many of whom we now consider friends, and seeing the amazing bikes that they have created and are so proud of displaying.”
And with that Phil, a talented custom frame-maker in his own right, headed back to his Simple Cycles workshop, which one feels he may have been missing a bit in the run-up to the event. For anyone remotely interested in the craft, technology, beauty or breath of bicycles, a visit to next year’s show is a must.

Bespoked have produced a short film about the event which interviews some of the exhibitors, including Joseph Ahearne from my piece above, and also shows the award winners.

Bespoked – The UK Handmade Bicycle Show 2014 – Lee Valley Velodrome, London from Bespoked on Vimeo.

Intro photos and Engineered, Nerve & Tsubasa studio photos courtesy of Ben Broomfield

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Free Safe Cycling posters

These are cleverly designed, beautiful posters – and they are free to download and print..

Sarah Connolly's avatarProWomen's Cycling

Thomas Yang runs 100 Copies, selling limited-edition bike-themed prints, and today he’s giving his designs away.  If you want the digital files of any of these Safe Cycling posters, email him at yangthomas [at] mac.com  and you can tweet him too, of course.  And check out the rest of his posters, I love his projects!

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The Ups and Downs of the Round and Round – Track Life

For most there was a carnival-like atmosphere accompanying the return of competitive cycling to the Olympic Velodrome last weekend. The sun shone unseasonably brightly on the crowds who made their way to the fifth and final round of the 2013-2014 Revolution Series and they were also treated to some magnificent racing in the superb building affectionately known as The Pringle.

But not everyone left the venue with that familiar rosy glow brought on by a combination of the sunshine outside and the artificially high heat inside. One person left the venue pale and shaken on a stretcher. Cycling is a tough sport and the heart-pumping thrills are often matched with heart-stopping spills.

Pringle

The Lee Valley VeloPark / The Pringle

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Wheels of Steal – Pro-teams suffer spate of stolen equipment

In what is becoming a regular feature of the early and late season races, pro-teams have again suffered a number of large scale equipment thefts in the past weeks. After Garmin’s high profile withdrawal of the Tour Mediterranean in February last year following the loss of 17 bikes from a team truck, 3 World Tour teams have lost significant amounts of bikes, wheels and other items this year. Garmin’s loss was estimated at €250,000 and was described as the work of ‘well-organised’ thieves. In a trend that will be causing huge concern to teams and suppliers this specific targeting of teams by seasoned criminals has continued in the recent weeks and months.

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Garmin were by no means the only losers last year. Radioshack had 8 bikes stolen in Flanders and Europcar lost all theirs at the Euro Metropole Tour in October. Russian and Danish teams were also targeted separately at the World Champoinships in Florence losing more than 40 bikes between them. In each case team trucks were broken into. In the case of the Danish team many of the bikes were from the Junior squad who have to pay for the their own equipment.

Team Sky were latest to suffer with 16 bikes lost at the Tour du Haut Var last weekend. Once again professional thieves targeted a team truck during the night at a hotel. Unlike Garmin last year, Sky were able to source replacement bikes and make the start line . TheJerseyPocket spoke to  Team Sky mechanics and riders who were at the race to learn more.

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The Jersey Pocket Podiums – #4 – Cycling Nicknames

In a sport where written newspaper reports defined the action for the first six decades of it’s existence, nicknames were an important tool for sketching the rider profiles and bringing the faceless coureurs to life in the imagination of the readers. Many nicknames mocked the riders as much as they celebrated them – consider Elefantino, Dr.Teeth, The Dwarf and Clogface – but they have retained their power through the years and many are still used today despite their owners being either long retired or buried. Sadly, cyclist’s nicknames have diminished in modern times as television has superseded the need for the floridly descriptive writings of those early years. Here are three of my favourites from across the decades:

3rd spot: Thor Hushovd. The God of Thunder. 

Hushovd’s nickname gets on the list because it effortlessly works in many different ways. It’s Nordic heritage quickly convey both his Scandinavian roots and blond haired, blue-eyed, muscular build. The reference to Thunder evokes his powerful sprinting style and the deification is well-suited to a former world champion. It’s a near perfect encapsulation of the man and his work.

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2nd spot: Charly Gaul. The Angel of the Mountains.

The lyrical aspects of nicknames have rarely surpassed that of 1950’s climber extraordinaire Gaul. Prepared to concede massive time gaps on flat stages, the Angel simply took flight when the road went upwards and twice overhauled enormous deficits to win both the Giro and the Tour in this way. He was able to operate on a completely different level from his rivals and it must have seemed like he was ascending to Heavenly Glory as he exploded away from them. Sadly the Angel of the Mountains later turned into the Hermit of the Forest as he became totally reclusive in his later years; living alone in a hut deep in the Ardennes for almost two decades until re-integrating into society a short time before his death in 2005.

Charly Gaul


1st spot: Bernard Hinault. The Badger.

In it’s French rendering “Le Blaireau”, Hinault’s nickname also captures all the core elements of his ancestry, his physical looks and his racing style. His Gallic-ness was best embodied by his forthright stance in the French champion’s jersey in his debut Tour in 1978. Simultaneously battling his rivals, the parcours, the weather, the system, and occasionally the fans as well, his face was eternally set into a glowering granite grimace; eyes blazing and teeth permanently bared like a cornered Brock who knows that ‘Fight’ (and not ‘Flight) is the only option. His ‘never surrender’ attitude was always to the fore, but never more so than in his Monument wins at Paris-Roubaix 1981 and through the much mythologised blizzard of the 1980 Liege-Bastogne-Liege. Devastatingly simple, Hinault is now so synonymous with his nickname that it has come to define him more than any other in cycling history.

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A good list of nicknames can be found here. Let’s hear your favourites and your suggestions for the current peloton.

 

3D printing – cycling into the future, layer by layer by layer

The Future arrived last week. The postman delivered it to my house just as I was going out for a ride. It is, as far as I know, the first bit of 3D printing that has crossed our threshold but, given the way things are going, it’s unlikely to be the last. I delayed my departure a few moments to fix the new part to my bike and set off into Tomorrow’s World.

3D printing has been around in basic forms since the 1980’s but has only really start to gain significant traction in the public consciousness in the last 5 years. As hardware prices fall and material options soar, applications for what has also been termed ‘additive manufacturing’ are now looking immense. A shift of seismic proportions, at least on a par with the home computing revolution, is coming as we will change the way we both perceive and consume manufactured objects. A 3D printer in every home is not such a far-fetched idea and would have profound effects on the way we conduct our lives.

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Multi-coloured, multi-material 3D prints will be the next generation. 

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“Another Fine Mesh” – Pro-cycling clothing debate hots up

Cyclists are often a bit funny about their tan-lines. Cultivating a set of razor-sharp transitions, which switch instantly from the deepest mahogany to a blinding alabaster white, half way along a thigh or bicep is seen as one of the heights of being ‘pro’. Tan-lines like these tell of days in the saddle, not days on the beach. They are worn with more than just pride; for many they are a badge of honour.

Last week however, we saw a couple of cases of cases of pro team ‘tanning’ getting out of hand and raising questions about protection and performance.

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Weekly Round Up – Tour Down Under & Tour De San Luis

It’s been a hard week to follow the start of the cycling season from the UK. Races in Australia and Argentina are not so easy to watch live; it either involves getting up at 4.30am and disturbing the rest of your non-cycling life with sleep deprivation to watch the Tour Down Under; or risking your eyesight squinting at a fuzzy web-cam whilst trying to follow fast-speaking Spanish commentary at the Tour de San Luis. But the very fact that there are these options speaks volumes about the proliferation of coverage. We’ve become so used to coverage of almost everything that this, in fact, makes for a pleasant (and nostalgic) change. Not so long ago watching short highlights programmes used to be the only option for even the biggest races and anything else would not even get that. Now live TV of entire stages of the bigger races plus legal (and illegal) streams and Youtube channels bring us even the most minor events in some form. Saturation levels are fast approaching

So it’s been refreshing this week to catch up the Tour Down Under in written and highlights form. I haven’t quite kicked the need for ‘live’ updates so have settled into a pattern of reading back my Twitter timeline after waking up to get the chronology of the race as it unfolds. By following a few teams and a few journalists you get the story of the whole race – early breaks and all – which highlight shows often skim over. Then, pre-armed with a bit of race knowledge, watching even a brief highlights package becomes more rewarding in the sense that you learn to watch the moves develop rather than witness the result and then try and work out how it came to be.

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Three is a Magic Number – The Trials of a Balanced Outlook on Life

“Somewhere in the ancient mystic Trinity, you get Three as a magic number” – Bob Dorough, Schoolhouse Rock!

Trouble, they say, comes in threes. The way the back half of last year went personally I would have to add in a factor of at least 10 to that figure, but the notion of a Triad of Adversity seems to be a well held adage. Once a couple of things have gone awry, we almost expect a third calamity to happen and often actively seek it out in order to discount it as quickly as possible. It is an ingrained expectation of the way that things just are. When you think about it like that, it’s also a pretty depressing outlook to have.

So, in a wild stab at New Year’s, ‘on-the-other-hand’, optimism, perhaps we could ask what if the blighted triple was not only a truism but was governed by Newton’s Laws of Motion in the same way that rider’s movements are. In a world where all actions have an equal and opposite reaction, those same three troubles must be balanced by three happinesses. Each three clouds should have three silver linings. As with the third disaster that we yearn to seek out, surely it’s just a case of looking. I’m aware I’m clutching at some pretty thin straws here.

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This month.

This pretty much sums up how I am feeling this month.

demeaux's avatardémeaux

Because of the last 14 days, I’d like to take this opportunity to publicly state my love and admiration for all my friends and family.
I’d like to think I’m a fairly competent cyclist, crashes in races/training rides excepted, but I’m really bothered by what’s going on in London this month.
It may be that this is just a distribution event and it’ll all “even out” in the end.

However, I don’t want to take that risk. I’d like to publicly state that I’m shit scared of dying under a truck/bus/badly driven car. I do all I can to avoid traffic. I ride fairly sensibly. I don’t run red lights. I wear a helmet.

None of this will matter one fucking bit if a badly driven and or badly maintained vehicle and or badly maintained driver takes the inopportune moment to fuck up in my general vicinity.

I know I…

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