Now that we're selling the Gavia poster, the new website is up and clicking along, and tour dates have been set over at Cinghiale.com, we can think about 2010. From here, right now, this all looks likely:
Jerseys - should be a lycra/wool blend; I'm seeing some cool designs, will share as we get closer.
Serigraph - a hand-drawn/hand-pulled image of Andy on a sporty jaunt in the snow, no pesky graphics or automobiles involved. Limited numbers, no release date yet.
Crema - what if we took our favorite "model" - a light steel Classic/Strada Bianca for fenders or big tires - built it in-house with Max welding, offered it in eight sizes, choice of three colors, and tried to hit $1800 for frame and fork? Any interest? Max's welding has been killing it, help me help him quit his day job!
Tournesol - shopping bikes are all the rage here, mostly in 650B with a variety of racks. Pictures soon.
Yard Sale - gotta make room for the new stuff. Our cast-offs could be your next bike at a heckuva price.
Comments
I'm in!
Beat us to what? Not the name, right? Yeah, they're offering welded frames to a size chart at a similar price point for long-reach calipers - but so do plenty of other bike companies.
What we're doing is offering a couple of frames that draw from what we've done over the past ten years - namely light road bikes designed for fenders and/or bigger tires. I'm trying to see if we can take some of what we've learned, combine with limiting some of the choices (and thus cutting out some of the back-and-forth with the customer), and still make an attractive, light, strong, and semi-profitable bike frame.
King - and Waterford, IF, Serotta, Seven, et. al. - are all offering not-dissimilar bikes as our Crema. But if I looked at every company who offered a "similar" product before we did I would not be here now. We don't invent this stuff, we just offer our own take on it and see if it sells. And much of it does sell.
I've seen the King frames, and I know the quality that comes out of my shop and from my painter, and I'm not worried. I think there is room enough for both frames in the market and my personal opinion is that ours will be just a touch nicer.
Welded bike shootout, anyone?
I'll talk more about my thinking behind Crema as we move along. And thank you for bringing this up, Fred - I hope I don't come across as overly defensive.
I do think that a reasonable alternative to both custom bikes and mass-produced bikes is what we might call semi-production (or limited) frames: it's an old idea but it's one I'm looking forward to working with.
Steve
Hey, if the frame fits and does what you're looking for, why should a custom size/drawing be necessary? Some people NEED custom but a Crema frame should fit about 90% of the people who have purchased from us in the past.
If someone wants a longer or shorter head tube we should be able accommodate that, within reason, at no charge.
Some models sell, some don't, but none feel random or that we're pandering to the latest trend.
http://heartroasters.com/coffee/the-skim/
Robb
The Rapha one is no longer available unfortunately.
Anyway, the Crema is an awesome product. Seriously considering a purchase.