Thursday, September 10, 2009

Bikes and high fashion

Over the past couple of years the various brands of LVMH have integrated bikes into their marketing. This last spring, for example, LVMH sponsored the "Bikes In Style" challenge, in which student designers from the Fashion Institute of Technology created stylish, practical and affordable bike gear. There was also DKNY's unforgettable but perhaps regrettable orange bikes campaign during New York's Fashion Week in 2008.

It turns out these bike projects aren't just from the overeager mind of a bikey marketing exec. The bike love at LVMH goes straight to the top: LVMH North American Chairman Renaud Dutreil is a daily bike commuter! He rides to work in Manhattan on an old black Dutch Gazelle bicycle.

Dutreil is featured in this New York Times piece on the merger of bicycling and fashion.
It is no coincidence that fashion is having a bike moment at the same time that New York City, the capital of American fashion, has gone bicycle crazy. The number of daily cyclists in the city has jumped to an estimated 185,000, from 107,000 in 2005, according to Transportation Alternatives, a bicycle-advocacy organization. Indeed, some New York designers are bike commuters themselves, like Steven Alan, who commutes to work on a foldable Strida, which looks like a bicycle as reimagined by Duchamp.
Read more at The New York Times. Via Justin Torrento.

5 comments:

Dottie said...

I have mixed feelings about this one. I'm always happy to see cycling go mainstream and NY Times is great press. On the other hand - $9,000 bikes with fur accessories? That is a bit silly.

Yokota Fritz said...

Maybe we should start up our own high fashion bike brand :-)

bikesgonewild said...

...i have design experience but i'm not gonna contribute if the company is called "fritzelicious"...

...just sayin'...

Yokota Fritz said...

I'm not sure "Wilde Man Bikes" would be much better :-)

It has to be something either French or Japanese, probably.

Unknown said...

Thanks for sharing this Fritz!
I loved the NY Times piece. Anything to get more people on bicycles is what I say. Fashionistas are so welcome to join in and 'Kill IT' with their fab, stylish fashions AND especially on any bicycle they care to ride and at any price tag!!!
I'm not in the market for a $20,000 bicycle (I'm more practical and ride vintage myself) but it doesn't mean I can't appreciate the beauty of well designed bicycle!