Categories: Kit

These Colors Don’t Run

One score and seven years ago, I first swung my leg over my bike with a specific training objective in mind. I was 7 going on 8 years old and already behind me lay the days of the bicycle representing freedom from the claustrophobic confines of “walking-distance” and before me lay the unexplored world of La Vie Velominatus. In the summer of 1984, I decided to compete in the only long-distance ski race that didn’t have a thirteen year old minimum age limit, the Mora Vasaloppet. The race also held the distinction of being the only race that boasted a real awards presentation, complete with a full-size podium; this felt like a real race and I was determined to be part of it. 32 kilometers to race alone as an eight-year-old boy meant, for me, a considerable challenge and one I intended to meet head-on; not only did I want to finish, I wanted to win my “13 and Under” age class and stand on the only podium step worth standing on. And so opened the world of cycling for me – as a means to an end, but it wasn’t very long before the bicycle began to overshadow the ski.

My world was very quickly dominated by the bicycle. Leafing through every magazine I could find, my imagination transformed the photos and written word of the journalists into live, full-color replays of the races. The attacks were vicious, the climbs steep, and the sprint finishes close. Initially, it was very hard to gain access to cycling videos, and the videos that I did find failed to live up to the scenes constructed in my imagination. To this day, I prefer pouring over old cycling books and magazines and letting my imagination reconstruct the scenes to watching replays of races on video. The gaps left by the photos and words are filled in fanciful ways reality could never match.

From the very beginning, as I leafed through those books and magazines, I carefully studied and mimicked the Pros. Black leather shoes. Metal toeclips, leather straps. Gloves unvelcroed when it’s hot. Sunnies over the helmet straps. Forget the Ray-Bans; I was off to the gas station to buy a pair of imitation Oakley Blades. Exaggerated grimace when you’re working hard, exaggerated look of calm when not.

But the kit, oh the kit. This most crucial element of Looking Pro, it eluded me from the beginning. Even at a young age, I felt that team kit was to be worn only by those who earned the right to wear it and as such was off-limits. But because skiing remained my competitive focus all through my teens, I never joined a cycling team and as such never earned the privilege to wear team kit. That’s not to say I never strayed into Team Kit territory, but it always felt a bit like cheating and I carefully constructed parameters that allowed me to feel that it was acceptable.

In the end, skiing gave way completely to cycling and I eventually did earn the right to wear the Team Kit of the various clubs I joined. Kitting up for a ride, there is an intangible connection one feels that is hard to convey. You are making a statement of who you are as a cyclist, of where your allegiance lies. Where that allegiance lies for The Keepers is obvious and was the driver behind creating the V-Kit; we did so with the assumption that only we and maybe our family and closest friends would wear it. But before very long, members of the community were asking to wear it as well. One thing led to another and today the V-Kit is flown by Velominati the world over, on every continent with both mail service and an internet connection (we have not shipped to Antarctica, though we would if we were asked to).

Our order process is perhaps the most cumbersome in existence. Step one: Lay down your hard-earned cash, up-front. Step Two: Wait many weeks. Step Three: A brown paper package arrives containing your made-to-order kit. All because you decided that you want to fly the Velominati Colors and make your statement about who you are as a cyclist. To say it humbles us that is to suggest that the ocean is somewhat damp.

As the number of people wearing the V-Kit as grown, so has the demand for more than just a black kit. Long sleeve jerseys, white jerseys, black bibs, arm warmerss; now we’re onto knee warmers, knickers, caps for summer and winter, and gloves, socks, bidons. The list will continue to grow and we’ll continue to pick away at it bit by bit. But one of the things that became immediately apparent, however, was that while the women ordering V-Kit are actually quite comfortable in the men’s V-Bibs, they are not entirely thrilled with getting stark naked on the roadside any time they need to answer the call. Apparently there are also some differences in anatomy that we don’t need to get into, but the salient point to absorb here is that while men’s jerseys work fine for both sexes, women generally have different kit requirements than do men when it comes to the lower half. The Women’s V-Short quickly jumped to the top of the list of items to add and we set about making it so, as we are wont to do.

As long as we were designing a women’s-specific V-Short, we thought we’d also make it all black, as a means to distinguis them visually. From the moment the first pair arrived at the Velominati World Headquarters, I knew we would be designing an all-black bib. For clarification, please refer to the Velominata laying it all on the road in full V and VV style, rocking her V-Kit with Women’s V-Shorts.

As a last point, due to shifting time tables caused by much of the Castelli staff being at Interbike this week, we are extending our V-Kit ordering deadline to September 23 as they will be backlogged and won’t be able to process the order at the onset of next week as originally planned. Place your order by midnight on September 23 for the next V-Kit shipment, still scheduled to arrive in early November. If you have already ordered the V-Kit and would like to make changes to your order, please contact us.

frank

The founder of Velominati and curator of The Rules, Frank was born in the Dutch colonies of Minnesota. His boundless physical talents are carefully canceled out by his equally boundless enthusiasm for drinking. Coffee, beer, wine, if it’s in a container, he will enjoy it, a lot of it. He currently lives in Seattle. He loves riding in the rain and scheduling visits with the Man with the Hammer just to be reminded of the privilege it is to feel completely depleted. He holds down a technology job the description of which no-one really understands and his interests outside of Cycling and drinking are Cycling and drinking. As devoted aesthete, the only thing more important to him than riding a bike well is looking good doing it. Frank is co-author along with the other Keepers of the Cog of the popular book, The Rules, The Way of the Cycling Disciple and also writes a monthly column for the magazine, Cyclist. He is also currently working on the first follow-up to The Rules, tentatively entitled The Hardmen. Email him directly at rouleur@velominati.com.

View Comments

  • @Joe
    Mate, I'm ready for the swap. Sydney is just getting a taste of spring. I'm so sick of the pre dawn cold morning, fucking around with lights, double layered kit, descending through fog, numb feet sessions. I can't wait to ditch the extra kit, feel the warmth of the sun, cultivate the tan lines...

    (BTW, I just ordered the V-gillet - because even though summer's coming I had to have it...)

  • @harminator.
    Mate, I'd hazard a guess that the last 2 months of our summer have been crummier than the last 2 months of your winter...
    ;)

  • It is amazing how this website and the Velominati kit continue to grow. In the next few years the V kit and all of the splendid variations may need its own Fashion show on the runways/streets of Milan or Paris.

  • Damn, I need to get a handle on my life. Been so busy can't even keep up with the articles alone, much less the banter that ensues.

    Coaching some middle school soccer...taking a big bite out of my cycling lifestyle.

    Nice one, Frank! Great work with the site, the articles, the kit, and keeping all the Followers both in line & stoked! The cool thing for me is that I found cycling just a few years ago so I'm still learning & growing all the time. After my college sports career was finished, cycling filled a major gap in my life; the Velominati add texture, color, and passion to it!

  • @Frank can you please provide podium photo after you laid down The V at aged 7/8

  • My new sunnies are going to just about tap the cycling-fund-reservoir dry for now, so most of the kit is out of the question for me, but maybe the symbol pack to adorn the machine... or maybe the V-shirt... or maybe both...

    Not the pint glass, though, because it would only cause me to drink even more beer than I do now, which ironically would serve only to adversely affect my continued pursuit of la Vie Velominatus.

  • @Gustav

    Just a remark: It's Vasaloppet, not Vassalopet. The one you are referring to seems to be a ski race in America, but the original is a huge ski race (15000 riders!) and a true classic here in Sweden in memory of Gustav Vasa, king from 1523 to 1560.

    Absolutely, how foolish to misspell. The Minnesota Vasaloppet is modeled after your real race in Sweden. I also believe yours is a bit longer. The US Midewest was actually a bit of a hub for Nordic Ski Racing; not sure if it still is. We have the Vasaloppet in Minnesota and the American Birkebeiner. Both those races were modeled after their bigger cousins in Scandinavia.

    The Birkie actually has a great trail that's used year-round. It used to be home to a Mountainbike race called the Shewahmegon (sp?) along the same route. LeMond won it in 1990 on a mountainbike that looked just like his roadbike, Scott AT4 handlebars, and his TIME ROAD PEDALS. This route featured some monster climbs that no one we knew could ride. I guess LeMond could ride them.

    Gutted that I can't find that finish photo right now.

  • @eightzero

    Not sure this is going to work, but here's a link to eightzero, resplendent in his V-kitte on the Alpe d'MtBaker.

    You know what's weird? All our orders got cancelled right after you posted that. Probably a coincidence.

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