Showing posts with label vintage girls on bikes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vintage girls on bikes. Show all posts

24 September 2014

Portraits of Cyclists - Vintage Outfit Woman: “I like 40's/50's outfits and it fits cycling”

40's cyclist - portrait


I'm from Copenhagen. I cycle every day with this kind of skirt. I like the late 40's / beginning 50's outfits.

I work in a clothing store named Mondo Kaos (in Nørrebro). We sell new clothes inspired by the 40's/50's. It's very vintage inspired.


I like this look since it's very feminine and it fits cycling.”

40's cyclist

40's cyclist - detail

More pictures on Byliv in Copenhagen.

28 June 2014

CPH Classico – Bicyles & Vintage clothes in the streets of Copenhagen

Copenhagen Classico

Last Sunday, CPH Made and Recycles (a bike shop which restores iconic old bike frames) organized for the first time the Copenhagen Classico - a bike race... or let's say a fast pace bike parade. Indeed, the point of the Copenhagen Classico was to pay a tribute to the stylish cyclists from the good old days.

Copenhagen Classico

The dress code: Retro looks for these ladies...

Copenhagen Classico

Copenhagen Classico

... vintage race outfit for this man....

Copenhagen Classico``

.... and stylish urban outfits for them.

Copenhagen Classico

For the occasion, policemen took out their outfits and motorcycles of yesteryear. Each detail counted for this event taking place for the first time in the Danish capital.

Copenhagen Classico


12 February 2014

Portraits of cyclists: Lilian - "The day before I gave birth to my son, I was on my bike"


Lilian - Portrait






































"I cycle everyday. So, I really need my bike and I love this one, especially the color."

"What do you like when you bike in winter?"
"I like to get some fresh air and to exercice."

"What would be your tips to cycle in winter? Do you wear specific clothes?"
"You should not dress to warmly, since you produce heat while you’re cycling. You really don’t need skiing clothes. You just need to wear a windproof outfit and of course a warm pair of gloves."

"What is your most unforgettable memory related to your bike?"
"The day before I gave birth to my son, the « water breaking » happened when I was on my bike on my way to the hospital".

Even if it seems incredible for a lot of other countries, here in Danemark, women cycle when they are pregnant, and they even bike with contractions to the hospital. Read here.

Lilian

Lilian - boots

More pictures of Copenhagen every day on Byliv in CPH.

19 January 2011

17 January 2011

Cycle Chic - Cycling Fashion in 1936


Vintage cycle chic from 1936 showing off the latest fashions - on a bicycle of course. As we always says, Cycle Chic is as old as the bicycle itself.

Via the always brilliant Curitiba Cycle Chic.


And here's a little bit extra home footage from the 1940's.

10 December 2010

The Bicycle Girl - 1897


113 years ago, a newspaper article appeared in the Milwaukee Journal about The Bicycle Girl. It was August 14, 1897. An article singing the praises of The Bicycle Girl. All over the world at this time similar articles were being written about the great numbers of women taking "to the wheel". It was an exciting and alluring development, sure, but it was also something that caused great - and positive - societal change.

One of our readers, Cream, sent us the text. It appeared on the Milwaukee Bicycle Collective.

Read the article for yourself. History is repeating itself. After forty years of the bicycle being branded as a largely male-dominated sport or recreation, we're returning to an age where the bicycle was an accepted, respected and equal transport form for Citizen Cyclists of both sexes. These are interesting and exciting times. Just as they were in 1897.

The Bicycle Girl in Milwaukee

"The Milwaukee bicycle girl is all right. She is of all sorts, all sizes, all ages, and all good looking. Sometimes she is very handsome. Bright, vivacious, interesting, wide-awake, and generally “up to snuff.” The Milwaukee bicycle girl is something Milwaukee is proud of.

Sometimes she uses the wheel as an accessory to show off a handsome costume; generally she uses it to get about town. Mostly she loves to ride and knows how. And she is not scarce. You can find her anywhere and everywhere. She rides to business in the morning. She rides home again in the evening. She does much of her hopping a-wheel. She takes long trips to the park and into the country. Of course she likes an escort, but if she doesn’t find one handy, why she can go it alone and do it up brown. She is to be seen at all hours of the day—and night, too, for the matter of that. She rides a good deal at night. When she has no male escort for a night ride she gets a female escort. That is the rule. There are exceptions, of course, but you can’t go by exceptions.

Ting-a-ling-ling! My, how she whizzes by! Nothing meek about her. She knows the rules of the road, knows what her rights are and knowing, dares maintain them. She is not bold or immodest. Far from it. It is not known that she is given much to flirting. She does look a bit roguish and—well, wicked isn’t just the word but it’s the only one in the language—yes, a little bit wicked at times. Graceful! Of course she is graceful. She rarely humps herself over her handle bars. She doesn’t look well that way and she knows it.

She mostly has a very graceful and easy seat and carries herself a-wheel with the air of one knowing all about it. She rarely gets flustrated. Down Wisconsin street, through the narrow and often crowded funnel of a thoroughfare over the bridge, she sails along up Grand avenue, barely missing the hubs of passing vehicles, but she does miss them and it is not often she dismounts to make the passage.

Out in the parks where the road is freer she can get up a good bit of speed. She likes it, too, and her eyes sparkle with pure delight and her face flushes to rosy color with the healthful exertion. And even little accidents are a rare thing.

Her costume? Well, she is diversified in that respect. Generally it is the short skirt and high boots, with a natty hat. Sometimes she breaks through the conventionalities and wears a costume that no man would dare attempt to describe, but that all men turn and look at. But not often. Her modesty is a safeguard. She never dons anything immodest. But in the matter of costume she is as varied in her moods and choice as an April sky. Watch her from any prominent street corner almost any time of day—as there is little doubt you have already done it there is any poetry in your soul. Here she comes in brown—a soft chocolate brown— hat, skirt, waist, shoes and all. Even her hair and eyes are brown. Pretty? Certainly and as trim and neat and clean cut as—what sort of comparison can one make? None.

Then she rolls by in a gray suit. It is hard to tell which one prefers. She is charming in both. And here she is in a blue. And that seems to be about right also. It’s hard to choose. And this next one. A natty shirt waist and black skirt, and the trim figure goes by with the glint of the wheels in the sunlight and nothing is fairer.

The bicycle girl is not a dozen years old yet, and she is one of the great institutions of the country. How she has forged to the front! Take her off the streets and out of the parks and an element that gives much of the color and life we love to see would be gone. And would it not make a difference in color of her cheek and the brightness of her eye? Has she not found health and a better physical and mental development, as well as pleasures she never dreamed of before she rode the wheel? God bless the bicycle girl."

The Holy Antonius' Last and Greatest Temptation
Danish cartoon from 1899, originally entitled Wheelwoman, which indicates that it came from the US or UK. The caption reads: "The Holy Antonius' Last and Greatest Temptation". :-)

8 December 2010

Vintage Cycle Chic - Paris 1945


Our friend Richard over at the US bike blog Cyclelicious spotted these vintage Cycle Chic shots in the LIFE magazine archives. Brilliant stuff. They were taken by photographer Ralph Morse in Paris, 1945.

As we all know by now, elegance on bicycles is as old as the bicycle itself. Citizen Cyclists of both sexes have used the bicycle to get around - in style - for more than 125 years.

Cycle Chic is just the name (and now trademark) I gave to the genre. It is, however, wonderful to see shots similar to the ones we've been taking for over four years dating from Paris just after the war.

Now, the bicycle is back.

History is repeating itself.

The world will be a better place.

18 September 2010

Rita Hayworth and a Dapper Athlete

Rita Hayworth and Friends
Rita and friends.
6 Day Race Vintage Cycle Chic
Dapper chap taking it easy at night during a Six Day Race. Similar to the banner photo over at The Slow Bicycle Movement.

4 June 2010

Beauty Bicycles from Sweden!


Here's a vintage ad for Swedish bike brand Monark, from the 1950's. The Swedish nickname for these upright ladies bicycles was 'beauty bicycles' or 'beautycyklar'. Doesn't that fit perfectly with Cycle Chic?! Wonderful.

Check out the lovely skirtguard on the first bicycle featured. When the lady at 0:20 walks out of the back, they compare the lines of her jacket to the lines of the bicycle.

This is vintage Cycle Chic. This is how it used to be. This is how we're making it again. We're loving it.

27 May 2010

Vintage Cycle Chic from Greece


A smashing little bicycle ride con musica from the Greek film, "Pia ine i Margarita" from 1961. Filmed on the Greek island of Kos. Beautiful shots of regular people on regular bikes.

Thanks to Theodore for the link.

26 February 2010

Pretty Girl on a Bicycle and Profiteering

Pretty Girl on a Bicycle
Back in Bicycle Culture 1.0, at the turn of the last century, the sudden and massive societal shift that followed the invention of the bicycle was most profound because of the urban mobility that women enjoyed.

"Pretty girl on a bicycle" has been a cultural icon ever since, not least in Danish history and on this blog. Back then the visual delight that was overwhelming the streets of cities all over the world was used and exploited in many ways. Like the advert, above. It's for a barber and he's sucking in the reader with a headline that he knew would appeal. A fine example of the powerful symbol that is the Cycling Girl.

Bicycle Clothing
The bicycle craze of Bicycle Culture 1.0 caused many people to realise that they could make some money off of it. They tried to convince people that they needed special clothes for the simple act of riding a bicycle.

Above, it's 'bicycle wear' they're selling. You know what? It's just a corset. Virtually identical to all the corsets women already had in their closets. Like with all the modern 'cycling clothes' people are trying to sell you these days, in the midst of Bicycle Culture 2.0, the clothes in your closet are sufficent.

Anything you can walk in, you can ride a bicycle in, as we here at Cycle Chic show each and every day. Overcomplicating the issue with modern versions of this corset doesn't help mainstream cycling.

Seriously?... people are actually designing "urban cycling trousers". Oooh. they look like REGULAR jeans but they're for CYCLING. Get off my internet with this crap. How on earth have we cycled for 125 YEARS without products like these?! Pure profiteering - and overcomplication. Sending all the wrong messages.

All you need is a bicycle. All you've ever needed is a bicycle.

Now that we're returning the bicycle to its rightful place on the urban landscape and redemocratizing it for Citizen Cyclists, let's keep our eye on the ball and do it properly. Free of fear mongering and false products.

Bicycle Bell Advert
Just so we're clear on this... 'Cycle Chic' [as we coined the phrase] certainly means welcoming additions, developments and improvements on stuff people actually need. Gorgeous bike bells, for example. Things that make your bicycle lovely. Things that serve a practical design function for urban living in general. Thumbs up for all that.

6 December 2009

Historical Cycle Chic

The Holy Antonius' Last and Greatest Temptation
This is a cartoon from 1899 featuring The Cycling Girl that had [still has - just look at this blog] such a massive impact on society. The text reads:

"The Holy Antonius' Last and Greatest Temptation". A cycling girl offering him a ride on a new-fangled tandem bicycle. The man was sold.

Tuborg Advert
Vintage Danish Tuborg beer advert featuring, yet again, the iconic cycling girl.
"A Tuborg tastes lovely on a bicycle ride!"

This latter advert features in a new exhibition at the Copenhagen City Museum called Copenhagen by Bike. All about the history of the bicycle in Copenhagen. I was involved in the exhibition and have a number of photos in it. You can read more about it here on Copenhagenize.com, including how to get there if you're in Copenhagen. It runs until June 2010.

11 November 2009

Cycle Chic 1910


Here's an archive film from London's Hyde Park in 1910. A galla party for children, who have all decorated their scooters and bicycles. Early London Cycle Chic, indeed.

And here's an archive film from Copenhagen around the same time, showing the City of Cyclists back in the day, including some charming children.

24 October 2009

Vintage Cycle Chic from Denmark and Holland


Here are two classic vintage cycle chic videos. This one, above, is from 1937 in Copenhagen. Just feel free to drool over the stylish cyclists.


Here's a video from The Netherlands in 1950's. Brilliant cycle chic.

Both countries had it ALL goin' on back then.

30 July 2009

Racy Bicycles


This is one of the most classic vintage bicycle posters in the history of cycling. Cycles Gladiators was a French brand and this poster was created in 1895 by G. Massias. It barely raised an eyebrow back then as scores of bicycle posters featured liberated women in the early days of Bicycle Culture 1.0, as you can see on this poster we've created.

The poster has been adopted by a California winemaker and is used on the label. The elegant woman has finally raised eyebrows in Alabama, USA. The state has just banned the wine from the state because the label is 'pornographic'. Read more over at Copenhagenize.com.

It's all so very silly.

1 July 2009

Vintage Cycle Chic For Your Wall


For the better part of a century we knew how to market cycling and bicycles. We focused on marketing freedom of movement, enjoyment, practical transport and effortlessness.

It all went wrong for the past three or four decades in many countries, where cycling strangely was relegated to merely a sport, a recreational activity or a child's toy.

The graphic design of vintage bicycle posters is brilliant and the message it is selling can't be beat. We have a lot to re-learn about marketing bicycle culture and these old posters are inspirational.
Vintage Bicycle Posters Poster

Now you can look at them every day on a wall near you. This poster features 56 of our favourite bicycle posters.

As always, it's available at our online boutique.

Or have a look at all the Cycle Chic et al goods.

Cycling in a Skirt?

The Guardian has a piece about cycling in a skirt. I guess the writer missed the epic, soon mythical, Cycle Chic Guide to Cycling in Skirts and Dresses... :-)

Gender Gap?
The New York Times has a piece today about how the Gender Gap persists in America. Women are a minority. Mikael was interviewed for it but only a single sentence made it past the scissors. :-)

27 June 2009

Thank You, Farrah Fawcett


As a boy growing up in the Western World in the 70's and 80's, Farrah Fawcett was a difficult pop icon to avoid. I certainly didn't avoid her. Au contraire. All weak in the knees and what have you. While I preferred the other Charlie's Angel, Linda Whatshername, Farrah was everywhere, especially in my boyish heart.

Combine the legend of Farrah with retro bicycles and... oh dear me.

4 January 2009

This and That Cycle Chic


A hardy Dutchman tackling the light snow and doing so in style. The photo is from David Hembrow's blog A View From the Cycle Path about a cycling life in Assens, Holland. As a fourth-generation basketmaker he produces splendid bicycle baskets, too.


This famous bicycle advert by French artist and printer G. Massias was produced for Gladiator Bicycles in 1895, when the bicycle craze was peaking. There was a wealth of adverts featuring women and bicycles, a testament to the bicycle's liberating qualities in society. Only four original poster exist today.

The poster and name is now used by - ironically - an American winemaker "Cycles Gladiator Wines" out of California. Thanks to Jan for the link.


Now I'm not a girl and I don't have a pony fetish but this combi-bicycle from Pony Pals, at the very least, is stylish and kiddie chic. Any bicycle that is far-removed from the sweaty sports fetish is a good bicycle. While it may look to some like a kitsch Made in China plaything it's interesting - and strange - that the saddle is designed by master saddle maker Paul Selvey. Not only that, the pony's head is created by Lado Goudjabidze, who also created a bust of Gandhi for the UN Headquarters and JFK at the Kennedy Center.

There are no prices on the website and I don't dare ask.

1 January 2009

New Year's Day 2009

Truth
This illustration, 'The Spirit of the Wheel', was one of the many images celebrating the bicycle's liberating quality. It featured on the cover of the New York magazine 'Truth' back on 22 August 1896.

The Bicycle as Truth. The two-wheeled wonder liberated the working classes and it certainly liberated women around the turn of the last century. Will it liberate us from car-centric societies?

What truths apply here on the first day of 2009?

- The bicycle is the most efficient machine ever invented.
- Riding a bicycle does not require any form of equipment - apart from a bicycle.
- It is shockingly easy to look frightfully chic on a bicycle.
- Riding a bicycle in high heels and/or a skirt is quite simple [women have been doing it for more than a century, for heaven's sake].
- Anyone who actually knows what their bicycle weighs should be treated with suspicion.
- Anyone who claims that urban cycling requires lycra or any 'cycling gear' probably enjoys cycling, but one should take their advice with a grain of salt,
- Coaster brakes are chic, normal and better than those finger-squeezy gadgets.
- If you had all the bicycles on the planet lined up in front of you, you wouldn't be able to see a racing bike or a mountain bike to save your life. They would drown in the mass of normal bicycles like the ones you see on this blog.
- Cycle Chic will continue growing throughout 2009. Taking back the bicycle culture for regular people on regular bikes all over the world.

19 November 2008

Retro Cycle Chic, Chemicals and Cork Cycle Chic


Here's a splash of retro Cycle Chic. Thanks to Adam for sending it along. It's an advert, believe it or not, for Union Carbide and it featured in the New Yorker Magazine in the 1970's.

On the left... pure Cycle Chic brilliance. Heels and a hat [see, Lynn? :-)] on a retro bicycle. Fantastic shot. These kind of photos gave me warm and fuzzy feelings growing up in the late 70's - early 80's.

On the right, a dry text for a chemical and polymer company. Snore. I'm guessing that the advert dates from after the oil crisis in the 1970's, based on the text.

They boldly claim that "If we succeed, there will never be another energy crisis..."

Um. Somebody didn't succeed. As I'm sure the citizens of Bhopal, India, can attest to, among others.

But the photo is great and, in the text, at least they say "something as basic as bicycling". Which is right on target. All you need is a bike. Not much else.

Cork Cycle Chic

Cork City Council, in Ireland, put on a Cycle Chic Fashion Show a couple of weeks back and have now released a film. It's a bit long, but I think they've done well to sell cycling as effortless and stylish.

The CYCLE CHIC Fashion Show reflected the spirit of the streets of Copenhagen, Amsterdam and Paris where cycling does not include wearing gawky reflective jackets and unattractive helmets. The CYCLE CHIC Fashion Show aimed to persuade people that cycling can be trendy.

They have a gallery of photos on their website here.

The show was sponsored by, among others, Trendy Travel. A European project to promote sustainable travel.