I dream of painting and then I paint my dream.

-Vincent Van Gogh

Poor old Vinnie may have been Dutch, mad as a cut snake, riddled with gonorrhea, a romantic in the most insane sense, and a raging alcoholic, but despite these encumbrances he knew a bit about the use of colour. He also spent a good chunk of his short, sad life in Belgium and France, so there are more than a few virtues that he and I share. (For the record, I’m not Dutch, so you can speculate on the other common denominators…) If he was alive today, he could possibly hold down a job in the paint shop for Jaegher. Because those guys know a bit about the use of colour too, and have just painted my dream. What, you didn’t think I was going to call them earless drunkards now, did you?

When this dream of mine was first conceived, the most difficult decision to make was not what materials to use (there could only be one), not which components to use (ditto), nor how I would actually be able to afford to realise it. No, the thing that most often kept me up at night was the choice of colour. After all, I’d have to live with this for the rest of my days, much like VVG and his problems both upstairs and down. Just when I’d think I’d found the right combination of hues, another option would present itself and throw the whole process into chaos once more. Too often I would revert to the safety of black, then change to something more risky like a Belgian blue or mossy green, before once again ending back at black. But there are way too many black bicycles in the world, and while 99% of them definitely look badass, there had to be something else out there to state that this bike is a one-off.

Gritty Grey. The name alone conjured up images that I could relate to; the tone and texture of the cobblestones of Northern France and Flanders for one, and as that’s where the bike would be born and christened, it seemed like a logical choice. To give what could be a monochromatic canvas some punch, the logos and highlights had to be orange. After all, it’s the shared colour of both Jaegher and The V. Commitment was needed, and made. There was no turning back.

The suspense and anticipation was almost unbearable. What if I’d got it wrong? It wasn’t like I’d had the chance to walk into a shop and look at the choices in the flesh, not that one gets any choice when buying off the shelf anyway. When the email came through with a file attached, the opening of it actually made my heart race. Open file. Relief. Joy. Ecstasy! Each new image put a bigger smile on my face, and I think I actually let out a few ‘whoop’s and ‘fuck yeah’s as I realised that this was my bike, in my colours, just for me. The Jaegher artisans had excelled once again, and the result exceeded all expectations. The finished project will no doubt take the stoke levels up a few further notches. Only two more weeks to wait.

My dream is in living colour, and Vinnie would be proud.

Brett

Don't blame me

View Comments

  • Love custom steel. Great lines and the color choice gives it a little bit of the stealth look, and I love when the color accents are inside the fork blades and some even go inside the seat and chain stays, obviously not for this frame, would not work. Color combo is spot on! I love orange.

  • @Jaegher

    @piwakawaka

    We have build 1000’s of frames with internal cabeling in the past. Today we stand we performance and durability. Any type of internal cabeling will cause problems in the future That’s why we don’t offer this.

    thanks, is it the cables or the holes through the tubing that is the issue?

  • Beauty! People who say that pleasures diminish over time have never ridden their own custom frame. I rode mine today and it fixed a bad mood I was in.

  • @teleguy57

    @wilburrox

    @brett

    @Deakus

    @Brett are you sold on the bottle cages or might you try orange, black or a combination/mix?

    I like them, they are King Cages so I think the raw beauty of titanium needs to be on display…

    I love the Ti King Cages… They work perfectly on metal frames. They’ll hold a bottle well. And when ya let go of them they’ll float away. What a stunning bike you’ll have. Cheers!

    Yes, +10 on King ti.  Have them on my ti Hampsten and they look as good on your frame as on mine.

    Another vote for the King Ti cages,have them on both my road bikes and they do not mark your bidons.

    Not big fan of carbon cages, had issues with then not holding on to bidons securely etc plus scuff your bidons.

    And for what it is worth the King cages are not related to Chris King in any way.

  • @piwakawaka

    Over time gears shift will not be smooth anymore and brakes will feel sticky. Changing cables won't cure this. Internal cables will fully covered cables will always have more friction than an external cable.

  • @Jaegher

    @piwakawaka

    Over time gears shift will not be smooth anymore and brakes will feel sticky. Changing cables won’t cure this. Internal cables will fully covered cables will always have more friction than an external cable.

    Thanks for your replies, I look forward to meet you guy's one day.

  • That is an absolutely sweet colour scheme!

    At the minute I'm agonising over the colour scheme for a new steel machine black/ grey/orange or flashes thereof against one or both of the others. However rather than make a decision that I too my regret or wish I'd thought longer about in the future, I'm wimping out and swithering towards the natural beauty of naked titanium. Timeless.

  • Brett & Jaegher, those are incredibly well done welds.  Probably not any stronger than the welds on my bike, but so much more gorgeous.  All the details just right too.

    Used to have stainless steel cages on my bikes to sorta match material, but would sometimes lose bottles.  Often on the MTB; rare occasion on the RB.  Finally switched to same brand cages as bottles.  Perfect fit.  End of lost bottles, though a compromised aesthetic.

    Really looking forward to pics of the build!

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