Marinus Gerritsen Of Golden Earing Digs us!

 

OK, I am now showing my age here, but back in the day when I was a Teenager and tearing about on a Suzuki AP50 with Clubman Handlebars and an expansion chamber screaming its heart out, there was a song that always seemed to want to make me get out on my machine and open it up for all its worth.

 

The Band Was Golden Earing, A Dutch Rock Band that had this massive hit back in 1973 aptly named “Radar Love”

This was a Huge influence in my life and still is today, as soon as I hear the song I sing to it every time.

 

 ” I’ve been drivin’ all night,
My hand’s wet on the wheel
There’s a voice in my head
That drives my heel
It’s my baby callin’,
Says: I need you here
And it’s a half past four
And I’m shifting gear”

 

Here it is:

 

 

 

Well , a mate of mine who resides in Belgium now is a good buddy of Rinus and whilst they were chatting, my buddy Gerard Haitsma , then showed him a magazine that i was in and he said that he loved Cafe Racers.

So much in fact, here is Rinus sporting one of MY tee shirts and looking at the magazine, this guy is a legend to me and I am so stoked that he likes what we do here at Carpys Cafe Racers.

To think that this guy is wearing my shirt and that I used to listen to that song so many times a day back in 73 is really such a cool feeling.

 

Here is the man himself in his studio- sporting one of my shirts.

 

 

To think he knows what I do for a living and digs it really is such a superb feeling, thank you so much Rinus.

 

 

 

 

 

On August 9th of 1946, Marinus Gerritsen was born in the Hague. When he was fourteen, he and his neighbor and schoolmate George Kooymans started meeting regularly to jam and write songs. Together with the later addition of Barry Hay and Cesar Zuiderwijk, they were to form the band that would become Rinus’ life. As bassist and occasional keyboard and harmonica player, Rinus would play an integral role in the development of Golden Earring’s sound.Gigs at locals dances and school functions gradually grew to larger and more notable venues, and Rinus quickly established his status as a bass player to be reckoned with. Already he was challenging the bassist’s conventional role, taking on more than the traditional job of holding down the low end – Rinus brought the bass into the foreground of the music. His solos were dynamic and super-intense, and the fervid energy with which he performed them live left audiences awestruck. His unique style attracted the attention of popular American guitar player Jimi Hendrix, who tried to recruit Rinus for his own band. But Rinus was devoted to the Earring and the creative development of their work, which was growing more and more sophisticated.Rinus was also the first in Dutch pop music to play a Danelectro bass guitar. For many years the love-worn Danelectro Longhorn was a significant part of both his sound on record and his stage persona. Tragically, in 1977, it was stolen from a New York hotel room; a heartbreaking blow for someone so attached to his instrument. A few years later it was replaced by a large double-neck bass guitar constructed by his father, who was an engineer. Rinus worked with his father to build many of his bass effects.
Rinus’ first solo recording effort was a collaborative project with Michael Van Dijk in 1979; Rinus composed the music. A few years later he ventured out on his first stint as a producer, producing both Herman Brood and the Urban Heroes.In 1982 Rinus’ first daughter was born – incidentally, two weeks after bandmate George Kooymans had also become a father. George had been married to Rinus’ sister Melanie for thirteen years. Shortly after his daughter’s birth, Rinus broke his collarbone in a soccer game. Four years later, a collision with an SUV left him with a broken arm. This second accident occurred in the midst of the recording of The Hole, and was a serious hindrance. However, with the help of special stands or simply by restricting himself to his foor-operated bass synthesizer, Rinus was able to continue working none-the-less. (The keyboard part in “They Dance” was played with a lead-plastered arm!)

Rinus hadn’t composed songs on any Earring records since the early days before Barry Hay and George Kooymans took on the task between them. But on 1989’s Keeper of the Flame, Rinus’ songwriting re-emerged full-force, with such contributions as “Distant Love” and the achingly beautiful “One Shot Away From Paradise.” Rinus also proved his truly exceptional bass playing skills yet again during the unplugged shows of the early 90s, mastering both acoustic and upright basses.
In 1999, misfortune struck again. This time Rinus’ bike crashed into a bus, and consequently he suffered from a fractured pelvis. It was another setback. But not something he couldn’t overcome.

Rinus is now living in a small place near the Hague with his wife, two daughters and a dog. He’s been a vegetarian for 25 years. He has his own recording studio and occasionally composes music for radio and television commercials, in addition to his work with the Earring.

SINK HOLE COLLAPSES PART OF CORVETTE MUSEUM

 

 

 

Sinkhole collapses part of Corvette Museum in Ky.

 

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BOWLING GREEN, Ky. (AP) — A sinkhole collapsed part of the National Corvette Museum in Kentucky on Wednesday, damaging eight cars but not shutting down the building.

Museum spokeswoman Katie Frassinelli said six of the cars were owned by the museum and two — a 1993 ZR-1 Spyder and a 2009 ZR1 Blue Devil — were on loan from General Motors.

Bowling Green city spokeswoman Kim Lancaster said the hole opened up at about 5:40 a.m. CST Wednesday, setting off an alarm and a call to the fire department. Frassinelli said no one was in the museum at the time.

The hole is in part of the domed section of the museum, and that area will remain closed. That’s an original part of the facility for which was completed in 1994. The fire department estimated the hole is about 40 feet across and 25 to 30 feet deep. Pictures of the sinkhole show a collapsed section of floor with multiple cars visible inside the hole. A few feet away, other Corvettes sit undamaged and undisturbed.

 

 

 

Frassinelli said the rest of the museum was open Wednesday.

The other cars damaged were a 1962 black Corvette, a 1984 PPG Pace Car, a 1992 White 1 Millionth Corvette, a 1993 Ruby Red 40th Anniversary Corvette, a 2001 Mallett Hammer Z06 Corvette and a 2009 white 1.5 Millionth Corvette.

Lancaster said information was still being gathered about what exactly happened, but it appeared to be the first problem of its kind at the property.

Bowling Green sits in the midst of the state’s largest karst region — the Western Pennyroyal area, where many of Kentucky’s longest and deepest caves run underground. A karst display distinctive surface features, including sinkholes.

No injuries were reported.

Frassinelli said a structural engineer has been called to the museum to assess existing damage and the stability of the surrounding area.

The museum is set to host the 2014 Corvette Caravan in September, a celebration marking the 20th anniversary of the museum.

Although the event is still a year away, 1,200 people already are registered for the 2014 Corvette Caravan that will mark the 20th anniversary of the National Corvette Museum. Museum officials expect car clubs from all 50 states and Canada to converge on Bowling Green for the celebration.

Bowling Green, Ky., is also the lone place where General Motors builds the iconic Corvette.

 

 

Sinkhole collapses part of Corvette Museum in Ky.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Living in yesteryear

The people who are STILL living like it’s 1951:

Captivating portraits take a look inside America’s Rockabilly community

It may be 2014 to the rest of us, but for the subjects in Jennifer Greenburg’s photographs, it is still 1951.

The assistant professor of photography at Indiana University Northwest has been photographing America’s Rockabilly community for more than ten years; people that not only dress like it’s the Fifties, but also drive perfectly preserved Cadillacs and decorate their homes with furniture to rival the retro sets of Mad Men.

‘At first I thought the culture was about fashion,’ the 36-year-old photographer told MailOnline. ‘Then I realized it was much, much, more than that. I realized that this was a culture of people who functioned as a community.’

 

 

 

 

Jennifer Greenburg, the assistant professor of photography at Indiana University Northwest, has been photographing America's Rockabilly community for ten years

Jennifer Greenburg, the assistant professor of photography at Indiana University Northwest, has been photographing America’s Rockabilly community for ten years

 

 

From bankers and laborers to teachers and doctors, Ms Greenburg says there is ‘not just one type of person who joins the Rockabilly community’.

‘Some participants make their living inside the culture, but most have the same gamut of jobs that all people have. There is no trend,’ she explained. ‘Some dress at work to blend into the generally culture, some do not. Some have a hybrid way of dressing that is just toned down and not necessarily identifiable as 1950’s.’

 

She points out that, after all, fashion has not radically changed that much in the last 65 years. ‘A pencil skirt now is the same as a pencil skirt from the 1950’s. The only difference is the one you buy now was probably made in China, and won’t last three washings.’

It is this affinity for quality that Ms Greenburg believes the Rockabilly community, which spans across pockets of people in almost every city, is most attracted to: the ‘joyous’ design and ‘beautiful’ functionality of furniture, clothing and ephemera of the Fifties.

‘The middle of the 20th Century in the United States was a time when design was in its heyday,’ she said. ‘Everything American’s owned at that time was designed, and made by, an industrial designer who labored over not only how things should function, but also, over how things should look.

 

 

The Rockabilly community, filled with pockets of people from cities across America, not only dress like it¿s the Fifties, but also drive perfectly preserved Cadillacs and decorate their homes with furniture to rival the retro sets of Mad Men

 

The Rockabilly community, filled with pockets of people from cities across America, not only dress like it¿s the Fifties, but also drive perfectly preserved Cadillacs and decorate their homes with furniture to rival the retro sets of Mad Men

 

'At first I thought the culture was about fashion,' the 36-year-old photographer told MailOnline. 'Then I realized it was much, much, more than that. I realized that this was a culture of people who functioned as a community'

 

‘At first I thought the culture was about fashion,’ the 36-year-old photographer told MailOnline. ‘Then I realized it was much, much, more than that. I realized that this was a culture of people who functioned as a community’

 

From bankers and laborers to teachers and doctors, Ms Greenburg says there is 'not just one type of person who joins the Rockabilly community'

From bankers and laborers to teachers and doctors, Ms Greenburg says there is ‘not just one type of person who joins the Rockabilly community’

 

 

‘We did not have a disposable “Made in China” culture like we do now. When you bought a toaster, it worked for decades, and it looked good just as long. If it broke, you had it repaired. You did not simply toss it into a landfill and head out to a big box store to buy another. . . Yes, even the toaster was joyous in its design.’

The community of people Ms Greenburg has documented, she believes, usually have a desire for this kind of joyousness that was lost in the 21st Century. ‘Happiness, I believe, is everyone’s primary full-time job. And living a life that resembles, visually, the 1950’s helps make that just a little easier,’ she said.

From re-wiring a lamp, to re-sewing the seams of a Fifties cocktail dress, Ms Greenburg added that most true participants of the culture are skilled at repairing and restoring most of their possessions.

‘It is not as easy as going down to the shopping center and buying “a look” off the rack,’ she said. ‘The Rockabillies take preservation into account as
they sculpt their existence. And the culture existed long before it was commonplace to “recycle.”‘

 

'Some participants make their living inside the culture, but most have the same gamut of jobs that all people have. There is no trend,' she explained. 'Some dress at work to blend into the generally culture, some do not. Some have a hybrid way of dressing that is just toned down and not necessarily identifiable as 1950's'

‘Some participants make their living inside the culture, but most have the same gamut of jobs that all people have. There is no trend,’ she explained. ‘Some dress at work to blend into the generally culture, some do not. Some have a hybrid way of dressing that is just toned down and not necessarily identifiable as 1950’s’

 

 

The children growing up inside of the Rockabilly culture, including the boy in the cowboy getup, seem to love their eccentric lifestyle. 'They don¿t usually like Justin Beiber, which actually, gives them a lot of cache among their peers,' said Ms Greenburg

The children growing up inside of the Rockabilly culture, including the boy in the cowboy getup, seem to love their eccentric lifestyle. ‘They don¿t usually like Justin Beiber, which actually, gives them a lot of cache among their peers,’ said Ms Greenburg

 

 

 

 

It is an affinity for quality that Ms Greenburg believes the Rockabilly community is most attracted to: the 'joyous' design and 'beautiful' functionality of furniture, clothing and ephemera of the Fifties

 

It is an affinity for quality that Ms Greenburg believes the Rockabilly community is most attracted to: the ‘joyous’ design and ‘beautiful’ functionality of furniture, clothing and ephemera of the Fifties

 

 

Ms Greenburg, who has collected vintage clothing and jewelry since she was a child, said she started the project because she is ‘as much of a participant in this culture as in any culture’.

‘When I became an adult I started running into young people who liked the same things that I like,’ she said. ‘At first I thought it was just about fashion. Then I dug deeper and started to discover how much more of a subculture it was.’

She added that she took the time to get to really know the people in the Rockabilly community before she began photographing them. 

‘I am friendly, and I am not a tourist in this world. So I began to meet people and get to know them. And that’s how the work happened,’ she explained. ‘It’s also why it took ten years to work on. I felt that a trust and mutual understanding between myself and the person in front of the lens was essential. And that is why the images are successful — that trust.’

 

 

 

She added that she took the time to get to really know the people in the Rockabilly community before she began photographing them.  'I am friendly, and I am not a tourist in this world. So I began to meet people and get to know them. And that's how the work happened,' she explained

 

She added that she took the time to get to really know the people in the Rockabilly community before she began photographing them. ‘I am friendly, and I am not a tourist in this world. So I began to meet people and get to know them. And that’s how the work happened,’ she explained

 

 

The children growing up inside of the Rockabilly culture, including the boy in the cowboy getup, seem to love their eccentric lifestyle.

‘They don’t usually like Justin Beiber, which actually, gives them a lot of cache among their peers,’ said Ms Greenburg, who still keeps in touch with many of her subjects, even spending New Year’s with the family she photographed sitting in the front of the television.

‘I realized what a special and lovely thing I found myself a part of,’ she said. ‘I have a friend in every city in America that I can call today and go visit tomorrow. That friend will open up his door to me,  and, help me with anything that I need — a laugh, a drink of water, a shoulder to cry on — just like only the best of friends do.’

On why the project took ten years to work on, Ms Greenburg said: ' I felt that a trust and mutual understanding between myself and the person in front of the lens was essential. And that is why the images are successful -- that trust'

On why the project took ten years to work on, Ms Greenburg said: ‘ I felt that a trust and mutual understanding between myself and the person in front of the lens was essential. And that is why the images are successful — that trust’

 

 

 

 

 

Ms Greenburg said she still keeps in touch with many of her subjects. 'I realized what a special and lovely thing I found myself a part of,' she explained

Ms Greenburg said she still keeps in touch with many of her subjects. ‘I realized what a special and lovely thing I found myself a part of,’ she explained

 

 

'I have a friend in every city in America that I can call today and go visit tomorrow,' Ms Greenburg said of the Rockabilly community she has come to know so well. 'That friend will open up his door to me,  and, help me with anything that I need -- a laugh, a drink of water, a shoulder to cry on -- just like only the best of friends do'

‘I have a friend in every city in America that I can call today and go visit tomorrow,’ Ms Greenburg said of the Rockabilly community she has come to know so well. ‘That friend will open up his door to me, and, help me with anything that I need — a laugh, a drink of water, a shoulder to cry on — just like only the best of friends do’

 

The credit crunch, a knife crime epidemic – no wonder so many of us are sick of the 21st century. Most of us just grumble, but some women have taken radical action to escape what they see as the soulless grind of modern life. Meet the ‘Time Warp Wives’, who believe that life, especially marriage, was far more straightforward in the Thirties, Forties and Fifties.

1950s                                                                                

Joanne Massey, 35, lives in a recreation of a 1950s home in Stafford with her husband Kevin, 42, who works as a graphics application designer. Joanne is a housewife. She says:

I love nothing better than fastening my pinny round my waist and baking a cake for Kevin in my 1950s kitchen.

I put on some lovely Frank Sinatra music and am completely lost in my own little fantasy world. In our marriage, I am very much a lady and Kevin is the breadwinner and my protector.

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time warp wives
Joanne Massey: ‘Living like this makes me happier’We’ve been married for 13 years and we’re extremely happy because we both know our roles. There is none of the battling for equality that I see in so many marriages today.What’s wrong with wanting to be adored and spoiled? If I see a hat I like, I say ‘Oh, we can’t afford that’ and Kevin says: ‘You have it, I’ll treat you.’I don’t even put petrol in our Ford Anglia car, which is 43 years old, because I think that is so unladylike. I ask Kevin to do it.

I make sure our home is immaculate, there is dinner on the table, and I look pretty to welcome my husband home.

My kitchen is an original ‘English Rose’ design, with units made from metal, which was very much the ‘in thing’ then.

We bought it from a family in Scotland who saw our advert in an antiques magazine.

They had it in their garage to keep tools in, so it needed renovation. I have an original Kenwood Mixer, the phone is bright pink Bakelite, and even my crockery is original 1950s.

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time warp wives

Feel good: Debbie’s lifestyle makes her feel ‘as if I’m living in
one of those old-fashioned TV shows where everything is always wonderful’

We had the hall carpet made for us with an authentic swirling geometric pattern. I like to close the front door, pull off my gloves and know that I am in my own world.
I only ever wear 1950s clothing, such as tight pencil skirts, a white blouse and a wide belt.

Kevin wears ‘modern’ clothes for work, but at weekends he wears a smart suit and a trilby.

I admit I am in retreat from the 21st century. When I look at the reality of the world today, with all the violence, greed and materialism, I shudder. I don’t want to live in that world.

Relaxed: Joanne thinks modern life is too hectic and likes to take her time
Neither of us drinks and our social life revolves around visiting like-minded friends for tea and cakes.

I try not to interact with the modern world too much at all. Shopping in supermarkets is an ordeal, and I only recently realised that Tony Blair is no longer Prime Minister as I don’t read newspapers – they are just too distressing.We do have a television set, but we hide it in a retro cabinet and only watch things like Miss Marple, Poirot and Foyle’s War.My obsession began as a teenager, when I loved old movies because they seemed to represent a halcyon time, when women were more feminine and men more protective


time warp wives

the era

I went to a grammar school and could have gone to university, but chose to work in a bank.

I was marking time until I met the right man. Kevin and I met in 1993 at a Fifties Convention, and we had an old-fashioned courtship before he proposed.

I was ecstatic, because I had found someone with the same passion for the period.

Today’s society is all rush, rush, rush, whereas I like to take my time. I never leave the house without lipstick on, and I also like to help neighbours – collecting their pensions and doing shopping for them, just as women in the 1950s would do.

It may sound silly, but living like this really does make me happier – as though I’m existing in one of those old-fashioned TV shows where everything is always wonderful.

My despair at the modern world is one of the reasons why we haven’t had children.

I would be terrified they would be offered drugs, or become the victims of violence.

Some women I meet ask me if I feel patronised by being a housewife and spending my time caring for Kevin, but I never would.

At work, he gets teased because he’s the only one with home-made cakes and even home-made jam in his sandwiches.

But I often wonder if his colleagues aren’t slightly jealous that he has a wife who devotes herself to his happiness. How many men these days can really say that?

1940s                                                                                 

Debbie Cleulow, 34, lives in Upper Tean in Staffordshire with her husband Martin, 38, who works for a JCB contractor. Debbie says:

When I see a girl walking down the street wearing next to nothing, I think: ‘Why don’t you have more respect for yourself?’

Other women may laugh at my determination to make my home perfect for my husband, Martin, but I enjoy spending my leisure time baking cakes and sewing.

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time warp wives

Debbie Cleulow: ‘I try to make my home perfect for my husband’

I really believe that women today have lost their way, with bingedrinking ladettes and children as young as 11 going out in tiny tops.

The age of innocence has been lost and it is such a shame. My idol is Ava Gardner and when I watch her films – as I do all the time – I think that so much has been lost from today’s society.

I’ve made my home a shrine to the Forties, and I only ever wear clothes from that decade. Other people may laugh at me, but I really don’t care.

I think I have a far happier marriage than many other people I meet, because we have strict demarcations in our roles.

I do all the cleaning, ironing, washing and cooking, and Martin puts up shelves and looks after the car. He’s the breadwinner and I create a lovely – and loving – environment for him.

I met Martin when I was 17 – we lived in the same village – and he has been my only serious boyfriend.

It’s so much more romantic only ever to have been in love with one man. My obsession with the 1940s really began through Martin, as he was already going to Forties events when we met.

I have spent so many happy hours sourcing retro furniture and kitchen gadgets for our home, and gradually we are eradicating every trace of the modern age.

Debbie Cleulow

Retro: Debbie and her husband attract plebty of attention when they leave the house

We have an old black Bakelite phone, I use a retro Swan kettle and a full 1940s dinner service which my parents bought for us from an antiques centre.

I inherited our oak bedroom suite from my grandparents. It’s stamped with the ‘CC41’ utility mark, which shows it complies with the rationing of the time.

Likewise, some of my clothes are stamped with the same mark. I wear vintage dresses during the day, and for evenings and weekends I will dress up in the full glamour of satin evening dresses with high heels.

I wouldn’t dream of leaving the house without gloves and a hat. When we go out, we do attract a lot of attention and some people laugh, but I think that is their problem.

We aren’t friendly with anyone who doesn’t share our love of the Forties. Some people might think I am hiding my head in the sand, harking back to an age that is long gone.

But to me, the 1940s was a time when people were much more friendly to each other – they really cared about their neighbours.

As it is, I hardly know the people who live next to us. Of course, I’m not such a Luddite that I don’t use modern medicines and other comforts of modern life when I need to, but I find a genuine happiness in living in a time when life was simpler.

My job is to devote myself to Martin. He has a physical, stressful job and he loves coming home to a wife who looks pretty, has his meal ready in an immaculate house and has all the time in the world for him.

1930s                                                                                  

Diane Rowlands, 38, works parttime in a customer service centre. She lives with Martin, who is 40 and works in a warehouse. Diane says:

My love for the Thirties started with the music. As a teenager, I loved to listen to the big band sound and I would sit entranced for hours watching films starring Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers. They were so glamorous.

Back then, the world just seemed a sunnier place, even though it was an austere time between the wars.

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time warp wives

Diane Rowlands: ‘Ideally, I’d spend all day in my pinny’

Women were these amazingly glamorous creatures, with their perfect hair and immaculate makeup, and they were treated with such respect by men.

Men and women knew their roles in society and there wasn’t all this pressure on women to have to go out to work and try to be equal to men.

I do work part-time, but only because we need the money. However, we still have clearly defined roles in the home and I am the one who does most of the cooking and cleaning.

I adore baking cakes and if I had my way I would spend all of my days in my pinny, making my house look immaculate.

Martin and I spend hours sourcing clothes from the 1930s and I am always dressed in period costume.

I usually spend around £50 to £150 per item. I buy them from the internet and vintage clothing specialists, and I have wardrobes full of wonderful old clothes and items such as cloche hats and Mary-Jane shoes with T-bar straps.

At first I was a bit dubious about going out dressed in Thirties clothing, but I am totally used to it now.

Diane Rowlands

Anyone for tea? Diane spends hours on the internet sourcing items for her 1930s lifestyle

Comments from strangers can be pretty bitchy, though, because people just don’t like anything that’s out of the ordinary.

The Thirties was a much more moral time and there was a real camaraderie between people.

I try to escape from where we are now and rarely read newspapers because I find today’s world so depressing.

The pace of life today is so hectic and I think there is so much pressure on women to be like men. It is all wrong.

I love to wear dresses and skirts, look immaculate and be treated like a lady. My home is entirely decorated with 1930s furniture, wallpaper, carpets and ornaments.

Retreating to this world is our sanctuary.

 

 

 

Sandcast on Ebay $135,000 Ends today at 5:35pm

ANY ONE GOT $130K laying about?

 

 

 

Have one to sell? Sell it yourself

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Details about  1969 Honda CB

1969 HONDA SANDCAST CB750 CB 750 VERY RARE PROTOTYPE

 

Well, this is a super rare cb750 and people demand the price they want to pay, right now it has had 90 bids already, and very rare parts, although one side cover and two exhausts are not original, but so many rare early prototype parts on this that you will not see again.

I have built them here for 14 years and have never seen one with all this on and I have had 12 Sandcasts over that time.

So, be interesting to see what it goes for and where it goes, this was the first ever Supe rBike and the money warrants it I guess but not for me that’s for sure, that’s a big deposit on a house!

 

 

Here is some of the information that you may like to read.

 

 

THE CB750 SANDCAST PROTOTYPE!

 

THE HISTORY

Many know the story of the first Superbike: when Mr. Soichiro Honda started a 4 cylinder revolution back in 1969, with his “King of Motorcycles”. It was the bike that changed motorcycling.

That CB750 featured a transverse in-line 4 cylinder 736cc engine, that produced 67 horsepower, and a top speed of 125 miles per hour.  It also came with an electric starter and a disc brake!

The first 7000 or so CB750s that came off the factory assembly line in Japan back in 1969, had engine cases that were cast in sand.

Those scarce early sandcast CB750s now regularly command high prices amongst collectors around the world.

 

THE PROTOTYPE

What only some sandcast aficionados know, is that before the now rare sandcast CB750s were produced in 1969, Honda determined that they first needed to build a set of “preproduction” prototypes to market their “The King of Motorcycles” to the American public.  So in 1968 they decided to build samples of this new ground breaking CB750 to unveil at their annual Las Vegas Motorcycle Dealer Show, as well as to provide eye-candy for the various trade magazines, and for promotional photography, advertisements, etc.

What Honda sent over to the U.S. were 4 preproduction bikes:

  • A Candy Red prototype

  • A Candy Gold prototype

  • A Candy Dark Green Metallic prototype

  • And the feature of this special auction, the Candy Blue/Green prototype

These 4 special preproduction bikes were literally hand-built by Honda technicians, using many hundreds of unique one-off preproduction parts, to promote their new flagship line of motorcycles.

The unique character of these rare preproduction bikes is readily noticeable when examining each and every component part.  For example:

  • One-off sandcast engine covers, featuring an external “double step” on the Alternator cover

  • A wedge shaped transmission cover, fitting UNDER the Alternator cover

  • Very unusual clutch and valve covers (both appearing nothing like the street bike counterparts, and are very rough cast)

  • A one of a kind Billet Crankshaft (meaning it was turned and machined from one solid chunk of special steel bar)

  • Chrome fenders showing (under the chrome plating) engineer’s scribe marks to mark off where holes should be drilled

  • Hand hammered/welded exhaust pipes

  • One-off special cast by Keihin 26mm carb assemblies

  • Handmade white plastic parts throughout the motorcycle (while street version bikes have all black pieces)

  • Longer rear fender having brazed on turn signal stems

  • A 43 tooth rear sprocket (vs. 45 for production)

  • No handlebar kill switch

  • No provision for a tool tray under the seat

  • Sandcast “hollow” fuel tank emblems

  • Cast gas cap and latch

  • And literally hundreds more of distinctly different parts than standard, many of which are illustrated in the enclosed photos (Note: ALL vintage American Honda photos and flyers seen here are of the exact bike in this auction)

 

What ever happened to those rare first four hand built bikes?

The Red bike was taken to the crushers in Iowa back in the early 1990s (I know, as we got there literally days too late, coming away with only a small handful of parts from it).

The Gold bike made its way to Europe, only to be completely disassembled by its owner (who has no intention of selling) and it has remained in that state for the last 25 years or so.

The Dark Green bike has never been heard from, thus leaving this (Blue/Green) bike left of the four.

The Blue/Green prototype motorcycle featured in this auction just happens to also be the (only) one American Honda used for all of its initial promotional brochures, flyers, and sales literature. Example photos of these early promotional items can be seen here, and most easily identified by the bike’s very unusual front brake caliper.

I located this Prototype motorcycle through a friend some years ago, and quickly decided that it in fact did not need “restoration”, but rather just needed to be cleaned up and put back together, as the original paint and overall condition was quite nice. It is a very strong running motorcycle.

Please view the attached photographs to see more about this extraordinary motorcycle. Note: Where you see similar components shown in the same photo, it is simply a comparison between the part from this prototype, vs. a stock CB750 part.

 

ABOUT THE SELLER:

Vic World has a passion for Honda CB750s; that revolutionary motorcycle that turned the industry on it’s ear back in the summer of ’69.  His particular area of expertise, is in the restoration of the rare early sandcast bikes, that were the first to roll off Honda’s Hamamatsu line back in early ’69.  His thirty plus years of relentless focus on this motorcycle, has earned him the moniker of “Mr. CB750.”  Vic is widely acknowledged as the premier restorer of these rare bikes and he has been written about in many trade publications, including a feature article by Mitch Boehm in Motorcyclist Retro.  His restorations are highly sought after and have been purchased by museums, including a featured exhibition in Honda’s own Collection Hall Museum in Japan.  American Honda owns a Vic World restoration, as does the Barber Museum in Birmingham, Alabama. Mr. World resides in San Francisco, where he operates World Motorcycles, a shop that specializes in the restoration of sandcast CB750s.

BIDDING:

Regarding current values of sandcast 750s:

As a point of reference, fully restored sandcasts (with a “normal” 4 digit frame number) are currently selling at just under 40,000 dollars, with 3 digit bikes (Frame numbers 999 and under) fetching a 20% premium on top of that, and 2 digit bikes fetching more.

As well, a couple years ago, I sold a very low number (under Frame #20) unrestored sandcast to a collector for $75,000. This bike still was from assembly line production, using mass produced parts.

This auction is a unique, once in a lifetime opportunity to own a piece of motorcycling history. The CB750 Honda had substantially more impact on motorcycling than any other motorcycle. And this Prototype is easily what would be referred to as the Holy Grail of CB750s…The center piece of any world class collection of motorcycles.

If you are the lucky winner of this auction, you will own something that nobody else in the world owns.  There has been some strong pre-auction buzz about this bike from collectors around the world.  So, if you really want to own this bike, please bid accordingly.

TERMS & CONDITIONS:

The winning bidder will be required to provide a $2,000 deposit via Paypal within 24 hours of auction’s end. The remainder balance of the winning bid price is due within 3 business days of close of auction, payable only via: wire transfer, cash, or CERTIFIED check. Winning bidder must contact me within 24 hours of auction’s end, to make arrangements for final payment at that time.  If no contact is made within 24 hours I reserve the right to re-list the vehicle, sell it to the next high bidder, or sell it otherwise.

Please do not bid on this auction unless you are serious about owning this vehicle. Please be clear that the winning bidder is entering a legal contract to purchase this vehicle. Any non-paying high bidder will be reported to eBay.

NOTE:

Most banks and credit unions do not finance vehicles older than 1995. Make sure if financing that your financial institution accepts the year and miles of this vehicle before bidding. Please arrange financing prior to bidding.

TAXES

State sales tax is the responsibility of the winning bidder.

SHIPPING:

Buyer is responsible for pickup or shipping of this vehicle and all costs associated with shipment. If you wish to have it shipped using a service, we will gladly cooperate. As well, we are quite accustomed to having a crate built for overseas shipping to properly protect this rare bike during transit (an extra charge for the crate of course).

Thanks for looking, and

Good Luck bidding!

Item Information

Item condition:
Used
Time left:
5d 09h (Feb 10, 2014 17:35:59 PST)
Current bid:
US $130,300.00
90 bids ]
Enter US $130,400.00 or more
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Shipping:
Buyer responsible for vehicle pick-up or shipping  | Vehicle shipping quote available
Item location:
United States
Ships to:
United States
Payments:
Deposit of US $2,000.00 within 24 hours of auction close
Full payment is required within 3 days of auction close
eBay item number:
331120055291
Seller assumes all responsibility for this listing.

Item specifics

Condition:
Used: A vehicle is considered used if it has been registered and issued a title. Used vehicles have had at … Read moreabout the condition
VIN (Vehicle Identification Number): CB750-2113
Year:

1969

Mileage:

5,256

Make:

Honda

Exterior Color:

Candy Blue/Green

Model:

CB

Engine Size (cc):

736

Sub Model (Optional):

Pre-CB750

Vehicle Title:

Clear

Type:

Prototype

Questions and answers about this item

Q: I was wondering if there are any parts that you know of that are not original ones.
A: Hi, Yes thanks for asking! When I received the bike, it was missing both #1 and #2 pipes (the left side), so they are replaced with two very nice condition no number pipes. Also, it appears the right side cover (and its… Continue reading
Feb 01, 2014

The Lunsford Honda CB750 Cafe Racer

Well, sometimes we get some cool rides to create for customers and this one is by no means any exception.

To set the scene, I was approcached by a chap on the ear trumpet and generally inquiring as to designing and building a super cool cafe style motorcycle for him but as he was not getting any younger, could we maybe use a different set of handlebars so as to not give such an aggressive rake to the motorcycle.

So, the seed was planted and away we went with a cool, unique machine that the customer was requesting, he then informed me he owns a HONDA dealership in Texas and is the biggest dealership around and has been there for 30 years, Holy Moly- this bike had better turn heads,else I shall be in trouble.

 

So, with a bunch of old donor parts, this machine had to be begun from scratch, and to be perfectly honest, I would rather do that, as then I can get right into the bike from the frame up and, below is just soe of the photos of things that we did to make Ronnies machine spring to life.

I cut the frame to as how I like it, so that you can attach the Rear sets and not show any of that ugly triangle framing that used to be the original exhaust and rear peg hangers.

 

 

Next up was to smooth the frame and then bead blast all the old paint from the bike and then hit it with a Hot Honda Red, although this photos shows its more Orange but it really is a deep and Hot Red and you will see that in other photo’s below.

 

We also ditched the Original rear swing arm and opted for one of our Dresda Style Boxed swing arms and with the new bronze bushings etc, this should stiffent the rear of the bike up and make it fun in the twisties.

 

We did spend a lot of time on this frame, I hate to rush things and wanted to be very sure that I was happy with everything beforew the next chapter of this build begins.

 

Now you can see the real Color, the red just pop’s and this is the way I had envisioned the machine and we are off to a running start.

 

 

We used New everything and the front fender was cut and sectioned then filled, painted and pinstriped and ready for clear coat.

 

What a difference and boy is this a striking set up and am so pleased at the way that this bike is taking shape.

 

This time I thought we would use our infamous Vincent seat base, this has a few cool set ups and one of them is that you get a nice size pocket to store anything from your registration to a battery and electrics if you so wish.

Once coated with Hot Red and pin lined, the base was clearcoated and this looks awesome.

The frame needed some chrome to offset the strong Hot red and I thought Chrome and Black was a really good combination.

 

The bike then had everything New from the Genuine Honda Horm, to New fork tubes and internals to headlight.

 

We used brand new Excell Alloy Rims and then I detailed the front hub and then laced with stainless spokes and put the tires on the Customer wanted.

 

 

Front Brake caliper was completely taken apart and I polished and rebuilt it, as well as drilling the front Rotor and detailing that and any hardware is stainless.

This is now starting to resemble a motorcycle and it is fun making something take shape and come to life.

 

 

The rear end now sports the dresda style swing arm and an 18 inch rear Excel alloy rim, we rebuilt the rear hub and painted it and then I did my signature drilling and polishing, New rear brake shoes, springs and actuater also fitted with New brake rod too.

 

Then some super Works Performance rear shocks were ordered and the pre-load set.

Oil tank was stripped and powder coated and new dip stick too.

 

I polished the top triple tree, then polished the handlebar holders and used stainless allen head bolts to secure everything, I also used a CB400-4 Super Sport set of handlebars and thottle cables. Then it was time to pull the gauges apart.

The gauges I removed and totally rebuilt and then I used NOS genuine HONDA Gauge Cluster lowers, New Rubber trim and then original Custom Chromed Cups and after re-modeling the faces, I painted and set the needles and put her all back together.

 

 

This was now starting to look very Nostalgic and I am happy to say that this was fun to create.

 

The look is what we wanted and once the top was all done it was time to get on with the many other details that this bike must have.

 

New cables though out as well as speedometer and tach cables.

 

We used one of our master cylinders thats brand new and then used Braided hoses for the front brake as this actually increses its performance by almost 50% believe it or not.

 

Many hours are into this bike and when you work on your machine, you will understand how much time needs to be spent if you want a show winning motorcycle.

We used New old stock 1974 Waffle grips and made sure all was good and tight.

 

I removed the original side stand and then cleaned it up, smoothed out the old welds and then chromed it and fitted new hardware.

 

Everything is now Rolling, I even stripped and chromed the engine bolts to give it that finished look.

 

I used NEW side covers of ours and painted them the same red as the frame, then ran a white pinline around them and added our 750 Decals.

 

Next up, I wanted to tackle the gas tank as we manufacture the Dunstall style 5 Gallon Manx style tank.  This was then sealed with sealer and tested, then it was painted red and pinstriped to the same style as the side covers, I then went ahead and applied our HONDA decal, using a credit card and a microfiber cloth and soapy water.

 

This can be a little tricky, but I have done many of these over the years and really sets off well once the clear coat is applied and buffed.

The Red really does jump out at you and I was stoked that the Color scheme I achieved looked fantastic.

 

We used own Flip top gas cap and this sets the scene off well.

All smiles now as Paint is always the hardest to get right and this bike is now starting to get together.

The Vincent seat base looks smashing with all the detail and the hidden pocket is a great addition for your swag.

 

This takes 5 gallons for many miles of smiles.

Test fitting all the time, we make the brackets for mounting the gas tank to the frame.

 

I took this shot as I wanted to show the Customer how his machine is looking, as its important to liase with your clientele.

I removed the oil tank and decided Black was ok but would rather Chrome it, so we stripped and cleaned it then chromed and fitted with new Hardware.

 

Our finned Alloy Stabilizer bar says it all.

I hand drilled the rear brake drum and then fited new parts for the actuater and the arm and rod , spring and nut are all New.

 

Everything is coming together and this looks really clean and sharp.

 

Brand New lower clusters, new internals and stainless hardware adorn this bike.

I also fitted our oil pressure warning light and Neutral and high beam lights to make sure all is well at any point in time.

 

The Rims looks great, I polished the speedometer drive unit and chromed the cover, and she is dialled in.

 

 

New 7 inch Tri-Bar headlight fitted to make sure he can see where he is going in the dark nights in Texas.

Brand New Works Performance shocks are not cheap but they work so well when they are set up correctly.

 

 

I spent a long time on this front end to look right.

We were always busy at the shop and had to build other Customers machines too, but it was all worth it and they came out just how the customer wanted them.

 

 

The front end has detail too and if you look you will see we used braided hoses for the caliper and I rebuilt the caliper as well as polished it, and also fitted one of our Stainless Steel pistons.

Of course, I managed to purchase brand New handlebar controls and master cylinder, as well as new levers and grips and I fitted these to New old Stock CB400 Super Sport handlebars to give the guy a more relaxed ride.

 

 

Its so nice when everything is New and such a change in look to the rusty and worn parts from previously.

 

Well, here she is in all her Glory, the Motor has so much work, it has a ripping 836 kit from Wiseco, it has Smooth Bore carbs and the head is port and polished, balanced crank and New clutch with Heavy Duty studs, send this bike down the rad effortlessly.

Back at the stable of the owner in Texas, he was super stoked with the machine.

 

 

I dont see Iron Bridges too much round here and Ronnie loves to ride this machine, so great to see it alive and used.

The bike looks and sounds awesome with our 4 into 1 system on it.

 

A fun build and was a pleasure to be involved in this creation of speed.

 

Now all it needs is good weather and Ronnie hauls off into his next adventure.

 

Advertisments with a twist !

Some rather dodgy adverts I thought I would post today- as it may wake you up a little this morning!
I see Burger King like the grab peoples attention with this advert.
Now this is more than a little suspect here, if ya Catholic – don’t look!
Below is a very clever design to show the Girls are Hooked on this brand of clothing.
Now, be careful on the next photo. this is very clever with the use of just 3 beer bottles, but I am sure this will definatly get your attention?
How the hell do you comment on this advert below?
Creepy advert next!!!
I had to put this on as it makes me laugh!
Of Course Nike has a fun advert too.
My Girlfriend has a Mini Cooper, but these means something different to  having a Nose Bra for your car.
This is a very dodgy advert to conserve water!   Yeah Right!
The Courier service is bloody fast that’s for sure.
And what a great advert from Santa for smokes!
Christmas cigarettes, c. 1950
Now, this is a little weird too but the real deal.
http://media.onsugar.com/files/2011/04/14/2/1547/15478845/bb/strange_retro_advertisements_02.jpg
What was this company thinking?
http://media.onsugar.com/files/2011/04/14/2/1547/15478845/ec/strange_retro_advertisements_11.jpg
Charlton Heston would be so happy if he saw this advert.
http://media.onsugar.com/files/2011/04/14/2/1547/15478845/77/strange_retro_advertisements_12.jpg
.
For all you church goers, this mac’s for you!
My what a happy bunch, maybe its the Winchester family?
This was an advert I never saw as a kid but wonder how people would react to this these days?
Thanks for watching and have a great Wednesday!
.

BIKES ARE COOL !

Bikes are cool

By  on 23 January 2014 in Style

Bikes are cool

Tim Rogers, of Spirit of the Seventies, shaking down a bike. Photo: Grant Robinson

In literature, film, popular culture and in the consciousness of Joe Average in his red brick semi with 2.3 kids and 0.7 Golden Retrievers (or whatever the figures from the Office of National Statistics now say we all have) bikes have been a totem for rebellion.

Steve McQueen, James Dean, Marlon Brando and a strange obsession with back-patch bike gangs – bikes spoke to everyday folk of escape from the humdrum, of a refusal to compromise, of a determination to find one’s own path. Risk in return for kicks – the opposite of most people’s lives.

But of course they were also scary, dangerous, cold and wet, so Joe Average rarely bought one. In essence it worked like this: the average British man did not want his daughter to marry a biker, but he secretly wanted to be one every time he saw a bike.

But something’s changed. Bikes are suddenly extraordinarily cool…and that cool is driving a huge, new fashion and style revolution which you can see everywhere.

Today you can’t move for Hollywood leading men (and the odd leading lady) being ‘papped’ riding customs through Beverly Hills; and the “biker look” – more 1960s Steve McQueen than 2004 Valentino Rossi of course – is now crushingly fashionable.

Old British brands which once made bike kit have suddenly remembered this fact and are marketing themselves on that front mercilessly – see Barbour’s new flagship “motorcycle” store on London’s ultra expensive Piccadilly for example (not one member of staff rides – that’s not what the place is for, despite a scattering of off-road tires and goggles being included by the interior designer).

That bargain Belstaff jacket full of holes these days will be £400

Near where I used to live in south London there’s an old, weather-worn shop of little note from the outside. Inside, though, it has been, for two decades, a haven for motorcyclists. Ancient leathers and wax jackets from Lewis and Belstaff and other great names of the past; Bell open-face helmets, old doe-skin gloves. None of it cutting edge in terms of warmth or protection but all possessed of a certain style which, if you rode certain kinds of bikes, fitted nicely. On a good day you could part with £70 and be in the pub on the corner by lunchtime in possession of a lovely 80s Barbour bike jacket which, with some TLC, would be great for your summer commute on the machine you ran.

The shop’s still there, but now there’s an organic coffee bar in the back, complete with old motorcycle race posters and kit for the customers to lounge around amidst, looking hip, and that bargain Belstaff jacket full of holes these days will be £400.

What’s going on? Where has this come from?

It's not illegal officer, Valentino Rossi says they're more grippy. The Bike Shed Event II. Photo: Gunner Broucke

It’s not illegal officer, Valentino Rossi says they’re more grippy. The Bike Shed Event II. Photo: Gunner Broucke

Whilst it’s tempting to dismiss a lot of this as fashionista nonsense and presume that in six months they’ll be dressed as farmers or circus acts instead, there’s actually something fundamental behind it.

The biking scene – that’s the real one where people ride bikes, not the dressing up one – is changing, and it’s driving this look you see all around you now in so many other areas of style.

A new custom scene has grown up in sheds and under old railway arches across England, giving new life to humdrum old machines of the 1970s and 1980s.

Cafe racers, street trackers and brat bikes are the name of the game in this world and looking good is not a by-product of riding the machines, it’s an essential component.

This scene is not about badass outlaw bikers

This scene is not about badass outlaw bikers, but has been driven instead by those coming mainly from the creative industries; photographers, copywriters, brand managers and designers. They have found a shared love of combining their long-held passion for riding with the artistry of creating individual, unique and very cool machines. The aesthetics matter as much as the machinery.

Old skool “one per center” back-patch gangs dismiss them as rich kids playing at biking, but very few are that and most have taken huge financial risks to become builders. A lot simply won’t survive, but some will and the scene is now on the brink of breaking through to the mainstream as never before.

Spirit of the Seventies (here I declare an interest because they built one of my bikes), Untitled Motorcycles, Kevil’s Speed Shop, and East London Chop Shop are amongst the better known of the builders who are a little older and have started businesses after walking away from other careers, but already there is another culture within the scene – groups like Kingdom of Kicks and Black Skulls, made up of younger riders for whom the scene is less a business than a pure lifestyle.

Soho hairdressers Billy&Bo do their thing at a BSMC Event

Soho hairdressers Billy&Bo do their thing at a BSMC Event

This swirling, complex collective comes together under the banner of the Bike Shed Motorcycle Club, or BSMC, founded by Anthony “Dutch” van Someren (who was pictured beside David Beckham – the new face of Barbour – at his unveiling by the brand last year, so crucial is “authenticity” in milking the marketing miles out of the scene for big brands).

Last year BSMC held two shows, both in fashionable back-street art galleries in east London. They were tentatively testing the water. It was very warm – the response, both in terms of footfall and media coverage (including acres of print in mainstream, non-biking media), was staggering. Thousands came.

“Everyone in the scene wants to say it’s about the bikes not the style, but I think the reality is it has to be about both,” says Dutch, a brand director whose background is in television and publishing. “The scene keeps evolving. It was all about Japanese brat style bikes, which was picked-up and turned into the Australian beach biker/surfer scene, then café racers made a return. The start of last year saw an uprising in BMW boxer twins of all descriptions, and after the summer we saw bikes like the Honda CX500 and GT550 becoming head-turners, and now we’re seeing late 80s Honda Dominators and other big singles being turned into 70s style street trackers, which is where I think it’s going to go this year.

The scene will survive as long as we don’t codify it

“The scene will survive as long as we don’t codify it. Punk got codified. It was all about fucking things up and suddenly fucking things up became the rules. If we don’t let that happen it’ll still be here, in whatever form, in years to come.”

The runaway success of the two BSMC events last year, and the way the new skool custom scene has accidentally sparked a change in the world of fashion, has led to the group deciding to open a permanent venue in London – a mix between a gallery of cool bikes, a drop-in centre for the scene and those curious about it, a clothing and accessories store, a shop window for builders and a coffee shop/café. Investors, who’ve taken a look at Barbour/Belstaff’s desperation to cash in on the scene, are already coming aboard. “What’s crucial for us is that it’s not just about money,” says Dutch. “This has to be about working with people who want to be a part of this thing because they love it too.”

It’s also true that in 2013, the wider biking world, for so long obsessed by either bullet-nosed 1000cc sports machines or faux pan-African ‘adventure’ bikes suddenly woke up to this fact. Manufacturers, magazines and websites suddenly realised they’d missed a major trend.

Superbike Magazine's John Hogan. Photo: Phil Steinhardt

Superbike Magazine’s John Hogan. Photo: Phil Steinhardt

John Hogan, editor of Superbike Magazine, and one of the few to see and predict what was coming, explains: “I think what makes these bikes cool, and the reason the mainstream biking public has missed them up until now, is that they’re not for the mainstream biking public. They are for the people who make them and who have, as a result, developed the whole scene. Often these people come from a different background to most bikers – they’re people who were in to their BMXing and skateboarding, outgrew those and were looking for something else which set them apart.

“What that’s bred is a whole new way of accessing biking. The customers for these machines are attracted as much by the style and the scene as they are by the concept of biking. That can only be a good thing.”

It’s the bikes, the builders and the sub-culture which have driven the mainstream

Hogan, too, thinks the scene is here to stay. “Part of what I think will make this scene stick is the fashion element – there is a ‘look’ which goes with it, an extension of people’s fashion taste and their character. The danger, of course, is like all sub-cultures it eventually becomes so mainstream that the people who created it start looking for something else to set themselves apart. It’s absolutely true though that it is the bikes, the builders and the sub-culture which have driven the mainstream – the clothing makers, the bike manufacturers and so on.”

Biking is not only cool again, it’s pretty much cooler than anything else. Across town you’ll see chiseled young things decked out in retro-tastic wax-cotton bike jackets, or battered leather ones, and everywhere you look bikes are being used to advertise something (except for bikes, of course).

Belstaff’s shop in Chelsea sells replicas of its (excellent) bike jackets. Why replicas? Well the real thing is heavy, full of armour and triple stitched…so ideal for riding a motorbike but less use for lounging about pretending to ride a motorbike. Actually, the replicas often cost more than the real thing. Belstaff knows both its markets.

And this reveals something more. The look people want is not ‘biker’ but ‘authentic biker’, which is why Barbour will (and I’m not making this up) sell you a £500 wax cotton bike jacket with fake plastic mud splatters on to match those on the 1960s version worn in pictures by Steve McQueen. The ‘authentic’ biker look without all the trouble of being an actual…er…biker.

More girl pulling power than a 911. Photo: Dave at Oily Rag

More girl pulling power than a 911. Photo: Dave at Oily Rag

John Hogan refuses to be chippy about it though: “The fashion thing, the fact that a fair number of people wearing the kit don’t ride the bikes, is fine. The more the merrier in my view. Look, I’ve got very little interest in standing around with a cup of coffee looking at other people’s bikes, I’d rather be riding. Riding’s a very private thing. If this whole fashion scene which has grown up gets 500 people on to bikes this year that’s fantastic. They’ll soon learn what it’s all about.

“Biking’s not and never has been one big brotherhood, so I’ve no time for the idea that people attracted to the scene though fashion are somehow less entitled to be here.”

Dutch agrees. “That was part of what BSMC was all about, not allowing things to become siloed. We’re all into bikes, and we’re all aesthetically-driven; these create a unifying theme. What I love is it’s back to analogue. There’s no health and safety, no digital. On an old bike you have to work the choke on a cold morning to get it started, and when you get to work your feet probably smell of petrol. You can look at it and think ‘I can fix that myself’.”

Deux ex Machina now sell bikes costing tens of thousands of pounds to the likes of Orlando Bloom

“I don’t think people mind [the way the scene’s become ‘cool’ in the mainstream for advertisers and manufacturers]. Lots of guys are in their mid-40s and come from creative industries. They understand branding and marketing and see it as a good thing. Of course some of the younger guys probably look at it and think it’s a load of crap and wish it would go away, but that’s as it should be.”

Yet some of the new skool brands already seem to have grown beyond the scene. Deux ex Machina now sell bikes costing tens of thousands of pounds to the likes of Orlando Bloom, have shops on three continents and enjoy a global online market in hugely expensive clothing. As a business, an undoubted success, but the gap between Deux and the scene it helped spawn is yawning to the point where the company may eventually suffer from becoming too big, too fast. Without authenticity, all is lost.

The thing which matters most in this scene though is all are welcome. Nobody has much time for turning people away.

Dutch again: “One of the guys who helps with the Bike Shed has become a good friend. The other day his wife said to me: ‘I’ve haven’t seen him so happy and content in years. He’s out there building things. He’s a nicer person to be around, I find him more attractive than before’. It’s like therapy.”

And so it is friends, so it is.

Guide readers are, by definition, style conscious. By all means buy your Redwing boots, your Dickies checked shirts and your Barbour bike jackets – enjoy them. But what I hope this article does, other than drawing back the curtain on the scene those clothes come from and showing you the people who made it, is also encourage you to think about spending £500 on an old Honda and finding your socket set. Trust me, the clothes feel better after a ride…