Forget quick-release skewer, the mechanical derailleur, carbon frames, or disc wheels. Never mind clipless pedals or brake-mounted shifters. Scratch those deep-section road wheels, lightweight helmets, or miracle fabrics.
The most important innovation in Cycling had nothing to do with those incremental advances, but rather with the invention of Cycling-Specific eyewear. To begin with, they allowed the Cyclist the privilege of being able to see where they were going, and avoided the indignity of having the eyes tear up on a descent. After all, no one needs to look like they’re crying because the speeds are too high. They also protect the eyes, saving them for important things like the admiration of the opposite sex.
Most importantly, however, they look cool as hell. And, as Paul Fournel rightly pointed out in Need for the Bike, to look good is already to go fast. To go fast, you need to look fast.
Oakley is widely considered to be the pioneer of cycling-specific eyewear, but others were doing Merckx’s work in that avenue at about the same time. While Greg LeMond and Phil Anderson were leading the arms race for the American eyewear specialist, another of my childhood favorites, Charly Mottet, was also busy sporting some prototype Rudy Projects and setting an early high water mark in the art of Looking Fantastic.
Once Cyclists sorted out that shades make you cool (we’re not as clever as rock stars), the late Eighties and early Nineties saw an explosion of rad eyewear in the peloton. Here are some standouts from the period.
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@sthilzy
Lachlan Morton would probably say so.
@il ciclista medio
Seriously, thank you for coming up with DiBasco's name. That would have bugged me, but I doubt I would have been able to recall it on my own!
I'm very sad I missed the early days of cyclospecific shades. I LOVE the Rudys on Mottet.
I have spent a few weeks going around and around with Oakley, trying to get them to replace some lenses that delaminated. I think they're finally going to do it, but only after many calls, emails and letters. I think their customer service is fucking terrible. I don't care about a 1-year warranty, something is fucked with these, so replace them. Stand behind your product.
To highlight how much they suck - I broke a Force shifter recently. Did SRAM ask when I bought it? No. Did they say it was far too old? No. Did they replace just the right shifter? No (cause they didn't have any Force in stock.) What did they do: give me a pair of Red shifters.
@Cyclops Us semi-blind folks can rock Smith Optics all day. Or Rudy Projects, but I found them less comfortable.
@sthilzy Absolutely!!
In slide #5, is Mottet riding with a single speed or is that straight-block so tiny my eyes can't discern individual cogs?
Oops - trouble loading the pic
Don't know if this will work or not.....
LeMan's Facebook post....
@BaltoSteve it was a straight block to start with. Chuck pushed that hard on the pedals and the high chair, he stripped all the teeth off!
Surely you know Andy White sells a range of Briko's on his website?
fyxomatosis.com.au
That guy knows cool, even if he is a ginger ninja...