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The best handbuilt frames — 25 makers who can craft your dream frame

Fancy a frame to your exact specification? These builders can deliver

Not all that long ago, most high quality road bikes were custom built to order by your local frame builder. Times have changed and today most are produced on a mass scale in the Far East where advances in manufacturing and production processes have seen all types of road bikes become both more affordable and more technologically advanced than ever before.

That doesn't mean that people don't want custom produced handbuilt bikes any more. Far from it. In recent years there has been a dramatic resurgence in the number of custom builders in the UK and other countries, and while most still work in steel there are also artisan builders working in titanium, aluminium, and carbon too. We're going to look at some of the best working today.

Bespoked 2013 sneak peeak - Sven road bike seat tube lug

There's no denying that most production road bikes sold these days are are well designed, well made and competitively priced and specced. That's why your local bike shop doesn't build its own frames any more, but there's still a place for the custom builder. If you've got particular needs in terms of sizing or geometry that aren't met by the mass market then custom is the way to go and, of course, it's also the option for those that want to stand out from the mass produced crowd.

Most of us don't need a custom built bike. A properly set-up off-the-peg machine can be made to fit very well. Of course, 'need' is only a very small part of the equation when it comes to justifying having a bike made just for you.

TBA day 3 - brian's go

Despite the decline of the bike shop frame builder, there are still a healthy number of frame builders, old and young, making frames, by hand and to order, in the traditional way. Some of the established names like Brian Rourke have been working for decades. In the last five years there's been a noticeable increase of younger framebuilders picking up the welding torch and reviving the nearly lost art of frame building. If shows like Bespoked Bristol and the North American Handmade Bicycle Show are anything to go by, demand for their work is increasing.

A custom handbuilt frame is a thing of personalised beauty: built to order and to your exact specifications, and made one at a time. Whatever the material, It’s usually a slow process, with the meticulous work meaning that some framebuilders produce just a couple of dozen frames a year. You have a dialogue with the frame builder from conception to completion, and you might have a say in every minute detail. If all goes well, through their experience you can have a frame so purely personal to you that it's your perfect bike.

Kajak hardcourt bike polo frame brazing.jpg

Back in the 80s, when custom handbuilt frames were common for racing cyclists, steel was the material of choice. The advent of mass production saw aluminium become the dominant material, because it's easier to mass-produce a light frame from aluminium. Carbon fibre and titanium, however, don't lend themselves to such mass production techniques and even frames that are produced in high numbers are to a large degree handbuilt. The making of a carbon frame has not yet been fully automated. The individual layers still need to be laid by hand into the mould and the way that is done will have a significant effect on how the finished bike rides.

There's no doubt that steel is still the material of choice of most custom frame builders - although there's plenty of variation in the ways that they stick it together to make a bike: lugged, TIG welded or fillet brazed. Some of the bigger builders offer both standard build and custom frames - that goes for carbon-fibre frames too from the likes of Parlee and Legend. So in a way there's handbuilt on a huge scale and handbuilt on a personal scale. They both have their merits.

So if you’re craving a handmade frame with that custom touch, just what are your options? We’ve rounded up a small handful to give you an indication of the current choice, including specialists in both steel and carbon fibre.

This isn't intended to be a comprehensive list; if you have a favourite custom builder who's not mentioned, tell us about them in the comments.

Prova Cycles

prova cycles supreme

Australia might not be the first country that springs to mind when someone says "amazing frame building" but this glorious creation from Melbourne's Prova Cycles took practically every award it was eligible for at the 2019 Bespoked UK Handbuilt Show, including the coveted Best In Show gong. It features a mixture of Columbus XCr and Reynolds 953 stainless steel tubing, 3D printed steel dropouts and seat cluster, and a carbon fibre seat tube that extends into a seat mast.

Prova main man Mark Hester has a degree in mechanical engineering and cut his workshop teeth building one off race cars and high performance road cars with his dad. His grandfather's an engineer too — but everyone knows genetics isn't destiny, right?

Complete Prova bikes run from around AU$8,500 to AU$20,000.

MacKenzie Cyclone

MacKenzie Cyclone

Back in the 1930s and '40s the British framebuilding scene was host to a wave of inventiveness as builders sought ways to improve the ride and performance of their bikes, often making dramatic-looking bikes in the process. The era produced the curly Hetchins with its baroque lugs, the Paris Galibier with its raised down tube, and the short-wheelbase Baines Flying Gate among others (those links all go to sources of modern versions of those bikes).

The striking, swoopy lines of the MacKenzie Cyclone reminds us of that era. Creator Age MacKenzie admits the design started as a doodle, but with a serious purpose. The shape "does away with the seat tube and seat stay completely and replaces them with a curving tube that better absorbs bumps," he says.

It certainly absorbs attention too.

Rodford Built Transport

Rodford Big Billy

Custom bikes aren't just about sporty riding. Bristol's Rodford Built Transport specializes in carefully thought-out family/cargo bikes and in particular the Big Billy here. It'll take a variety of bags, boxes and seats for up two two kids, and if you need to carry heavier loads you can retro-fit a mid-frame motor and battery.

Filament Bikes

FilamentOrange

There still aren't many places you can get a custom-made carbon fibre frame, but from his workshop in Worcestershire, Richard Craddock has been doing lovely work in composites. Like other small-scale carbon outfits, Craddock uses a tube-to-tube process, wrapping joints in prepreg carbon before curing them to consolidate the frame structure.

Woodrup Cycles

Woodrup Maurice close-up

Woodrup's shop on Kirkstall Road is Leeds cycling institution that's now run by second-generation framebuilder Stephen Woodrup. The flagship Maurice Woodrup model is named for the company founder and features cut-out lugs so each frame is unique.

Hallett Handbuilt Cycles

Hallett 650B Sport

Former cycle journalist, and still an occasional road.cc contributor, Richard Hallett learned framebuilding from the legendary Cliff Shrubb. Hallett specializes in highly individual touring bikes, often with 650B wheels, and won the best touring bike award at the 2015 Bespoked Handbuilt Bike Show.

Reilly Cycleworks

Reilly Cycleworks SPIRIT.jpg

Former Enigma man Mark Reilly gives this relatively new company its name, but he's not alone. Carbon specialist Neil FitzGerald looks after the firm's composite creations while graphic and product designer Damon Fisher makes sure they look good. Reilly makes frames in a wide variety of steel alloys, as well as titanium and carbon fibre.

Read our review of the Reilly Gradient gravel/adventure bike

Sarto Antonio

sarto_VENETO_SL.jpg

Usually just referred to as Sarto, this Italian father-and-son outfit is run by Antonio and Enrico Sarto and has been making custom frames since 1950. They've become prominent in recent years as a specialist in very light, very expensive carbon fibre frames, and they also make frames for other manufacturers. Sarto specialises in tube-to-tube manufacturing, allowing virtually unlimited customisation.

Read our review of the Sarto Asola
Read our review of the Sarto Seta

Saffron Frameworks

Saffron Frameworks Audax.jpg

Saffron Frameworks was founded in 2009 by Matthew Sowter. Like many of the new-generation custom framebuilders, he solely works with steel. Sowter has won various awards over the years, testament to the quality of his workmanship. As a result of his growing reputation and the popularity for going custom, there's a long waiting list to get a Saffron frame.

Read our review of a Saffron Frameworks custom

Stoemper Bikes

Stoemper Darrell

The motto of this Portland, Oregon cyclo-cross and road specialist is "Designed to be raced the shit out of", which is admirably to the point, if a bit clunky. There's nothing clunky about their clean, tidy bikes in titanium, aluminium and steel, though.

Read our reviw of the Stoemper Darrell Disc
Read our review of the Stoemper Taylor

Hersh

Hersh-disc.jpg

​It sounds like someone's name, but this Italian outfit's brand actually stands for High Energy Race Sport History. They started in 2009 with a bike shop in Riva Del Garda and now offer a range of custom carbon road bikes, using tube-to-tube construction to allow fine-tuning of the geometry.

Read our review of the Hersh Trinity

Demon Frameworks

Demon Frameworks Manhattan - full bike

Demon Frameworks started up in 2009. Set up by Tom Warmerdam in Southampton, the brand is among the new wave of young British builders. Pictured is the Manhattan, one of his signature frames. The lugs, dropouts and fork crown are all lovingly handcrafted. Demon's work has been recognised with awards, including the 'Best Road' prize at the North American Handbuilt Bike Show this year.

Swallow Handmade Frames

Well known in the 1980s and '90s in the UK for their innovative frames and specialist components for tandems and mountain bikes, Peter Bird and Robert Wade are hand-making frames again after a 12 year break. Back in the day, they were the world's youngest Reynolds 753-approved frame builders.

Hartley Cycles

Hartley Cycles 853+mini+tourer+full+side.jpg

From her workshop in London, Caren Hartley has forged a formidable reputation as one the UK's most meticulous builders. A former sculptor and jeweller, she turned her skills and attention to detail to bicycles after becoming disenchanted with the art scene; that world's loss is cycling's gain.

Enigma Cycles

Well established as one of the finest producers of titanium frames (and a few steel ones) in the UK, Engima are passionate about craftsmanship and have been actively trying to bring back the nearly lost art of frame building. Alongside a nice range of production steel and titanium frames, Enigma can produce handbuilt titanium and steel frames at their East Sussex facility.

Feather Cycles

FEATHER-RAPHA-003.jpg

Another of the new wave of young British framebuilders reviving the tradition of handbuilt frames is BMXer turned framebuilder Ricky Feather. He launched Feather Cycles about 10 years ago in North Yorkshire. From there has been building exquisite head turning frames with beautiful hand carved lugs. He's self taught and currently builds around 25 frames a year, and is in demand. He's co-author of new book called Made in England, a lavish celebration of British framebuilders.

Shand

Based in Livingston, Scotland, Shand have been handbuilding frames since 2003. They have launched several interesting bikes since then, including a disc-equipped cyclocross model. They specialise in handbuilt steel frames but now also offer a couple of production frames, with several sizes available.

Beaumont Bicycle

Beaumont.jpg

Liz Colebrook started, as so many framebuilders do, as a mechanic before picking up a brazing torch and setting up Beaumont Bicycle at the beginning of 2016. But she has also worked as an occupational therapist and has a special interest in keeping people cycling whose ability has been affected by a reduced range of movement.

As well as classic diamond frames, Colebrook crafts beautifully-made and thought-out step-through frames like the one above, which won a prize in the 'Outstanding Design' category at the 2016 Bespoked handbuilt bicycle show in Bristol.

Burls

Burls is the work of Justin Burls, a self taught framebuilder with a background in engineering. He's not immune to a custom challenge and has built some interesting bikes in his time, including a tandem. He'll custom handbuild a steel frame from his Harwich base. He also offers bespoke titanium frames which are made in Russia.

Brian Rourke

Brian has been building frames in Stoke-on-Trent since 1972 and has been a popular choice with racing cyclists over the years. Rourke bikes have been ridden to success in national and world cycling events. Perhaps most famously, Nicole Cooke rode a Rourke frame in the world junior road race championships in 2000. Rourke builds in steel and usually fillet brazes or TIG welds his frames. The wraparound seatstay design is a signature design element.

Breadwinner Cycles

I first met Ira Ryan of Breadwinner Cycles on the inaugural Cent Cols Challenge, and discovered an intensely passionate and driven individual. He was incredibly strong on the bike too. He has been making frames from his Portland, Oregon base for several years. Since he started in 2005, Ira has focused on bicycles as a tool for discovery with an emphasis on durability, and many of his builds are sturdy yet light touring bikes. The Randoneer is a classic built for long distance rides.

Breadwinner is his partnership with another Oregon builder, Tony Pereira, who is also dedicated to making wonderful but practical bikes, and who lectures at the United Bicycle Institute, an Oregon framebuilding and mechanic's school.

Independent Fabrication

CJsteel.jpg

Independent Fabrication BIkes started life in 1995 from the remnants of mountain bike company Fat City Cycles. It’s a small company staffed by passionate people and they produce some of the nicest frames you’ll ever set eyes on. Their paint finishes are some of the neatest around. Models like the Crown Jewel, Club Racer, SSR, Corvid, Planet Cross, XS, and most recently the Ti Factory Lightweight, have become modern day classics lusted after by cyclists in the know. They work with carbon fibre, titanium, steel, stainless steel, and in some cases a mix of several materials.

Parlee

Parlee Z Zero.jpg

Bob Parlee started making carbon fibre frames over a decade ago and the brand has since become one of the most desirable out there. Parlee only deal in carbon and they're at the forefront of carbon frame design. With an eye to the future, their new Z-Zero is being offered with disc brakes.

Crumpton

Nick Crumpton runs his frame building business from Austin, Texas. He specialises in carbon fibre and he doesn’t build many frames a year: about 40 or so. Every measurement, every angle, every tube, is tailored towards the needs of each customer. The build process involves precision cutting of the tubes, bonding them together and wrapping the joints with strips of carbon, all by hand. It’s a labour intensive process.

Legend

Legend HT7.5 - full bike

Legend handbuild their range of carbon, titanium and steel from their Italian factory and offer a full range of custom options. You can choose the geometry, the tube specifications and the paint colour. While the Legend brand hasn't been around for long, there’s a lot of expertise behind the bikes, and they’re clearly passionate about building frames by hand.

David worked on the road.cc tech team from 2012-2020. Previously he was editor of Bikemagic.com and before that staff writer at RCUK. He's a seasoned cyclist of all disciplines, from road to mountain biking, touring to cyclo-cross, he only wishes he had time to ride them all. He's mildly competitive, though he'll never admit it, and is a frequent road racer but is too lazy to do really well. He currently resides in the Cotswolds, and you can now find him over on his own YouTube channel David Arthur - Just Ride Bikes

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42 comments

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AJG1 | 3 years ago
0 likes

In the U.S.A. there are some fine hand built and custom frame builders as well.  Look up Waterford, Gunnar, Firefly, Seven, Moots, to name a few.

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Mjpsmith87 | 4 years ago
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People should also consider Quirk Cycles so effortlessly beautiful steel bikes

www.quirkcycles.com

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Doctor Darabuka | 4 years ago
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And for those looking for something with a slightly adjacent ethos there's another Bristol frame maker - Clandestine Bikes.  Here's a short and entertaining video https://tinyurl.com/y2jfujcf

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Biggus-Dickkus | 4 years ago
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Donhou makes some lovely bikes too...

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therealsmallboy | 4 years ago
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Check out Cycles In Motion in Sheffield. Steel and steel/carbon beauties

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reippuert | 4 years ago
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Sevencycles ? the premier custom Titanium shop in the world and the continuation of Merlin Metalworks's legacy.

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Bfg | 4 years ago
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Also add Sturdy Cycles to that list, very nice custom titanium frames.

https://www.sturdycycles.co.uk/

 

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Bmblbzzz | 5 years ago
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Argos do great renovations, resprays and repairs but you might find it tough persuading them to build a frame nowadays. They're simply so busy with the other stuff. Still, it can't hurt to ask. 

And I though Robin Mather had stopped building a couple of years ago.

But Jake Rusby is still building in St Philips. 

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SaneRebel | 5 years ago
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Oh, and Robin Mather, also in Bristol... https://www.flickr.com/photos/78152658@N05/ (not sure he has or needs a full website)

 

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SaneRebel | 5 years ago
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Dont forget Argos Cycles in Bristol too - not just superb road frame but rennovations and repairs too - http://argoscycles.com

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alotronic | 5 years ago
1 like
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EM69 | 5 years ago
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+1 for Rourke frames now built by Jason Rourke. Last one I had built was in 2002, still going strong and looking superb.

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simonmb | 6 years ago
1 like

The best thing about these recycled stories is scrolling up a) to see if I commented the first (or second) time around, and b) to see if I agree myself. I usually do.

In this case, still... Dave Yates? 

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Cyclewalkbob | 6 years ago
3 likes

Agh, I really lament the loss of  Roberts Cycles.

 My wife and I bought the custom made to measure built  Audax special in the female and male versions nearly 18 years ago and they are still like new despite credit card touring  all over Europe, but now regrettably  just used on  day Rides!

Brilliant bikes and brilliant service, a sad loss to the frame building business!

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markovich replied to Cyclewalkbob | 6 years ago
0 likes

Cyclewalkbob wrote:

Agh, I really lament the loss of  Roberts Cycles.

 My wife and I bought the custom made to measure built  Audax special in the female and male versions nearly 18 years ago and they are still like new despite credit card touring  all over Europe, but now regrettably  just used on  day Rides!

Brilliant bikes and brilliant service, a sad loss to the frame building business!

Geoff Roberts is still alive and kicking and making framesets in Sussex

http://www.geoffrobertsframes.co.uk/

 

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lesterama replied to markovich | 5 years ago
1 like

markovich wrote:

Cyclewalkbob wrote:

Agh, I really lament the loss of  Roberts Cycles.

 My wife and I bought the custom made to measure built  Audax special in the female and male versions nearly 18 years ago and they are still like new despite credit card touring  all over Europe, but now regrettably  just used on  day Rides!

Brilliant bikes and brilliant service, a sad loss to the frame building business!

Geoff Roberts is still alive and kicking and making framesets in Sussex

http://www.geoffrobertsframes.co.uk/

 

 

Also Winston Vaz in SE London, who built Chas Roberts frames for many years, and for Holdsworth before that. Some lovely frames:

https://www.varonha.co.uk/

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offtheback | 6 years ago
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There are even Italian Framemakers in the UK - check out the Lombardi frames at Racer Roser. Steel. Titanium. Aluminium.  Carbon.  And they do restorations of whatever you have (like my old Dawes Milk Race)   http://www.racerrosabicycles.co.uk/

C

 

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offtheback | 6 years ago
0 likes

There are even Italian Framemakers in the UK - check out the Lombardi frames at Racer Roser. Steel. Titanium. Aluminium.  Carbon.  And they do restorations of whatever you have (like my old Dawes Milk Race)   http://www.racerrosabicycles.co.uk/

C

 

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sea_biscuit | 6 years ago
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i'd also add Lapsley Frameworks. True artisan, bespoke all those things if you want a beautiful steel frame. Has won at Bespoke Britain.

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BehindTheBikesheds | 6 years ago
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Have you seen this list? https://www.lfgss.com/conversations/133119/

There are also a few frmebuilders who are shocking at keeping promises timescale wise, there's one well known UK builder (a one man band) who had been fobbing off a customer for best part of two years from large deposit https://forum.cyclinguk.org/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=120959.

It isn't always a stress free and fulfilling experience and for me the only handbuilt fame that I own and know who put it together is my Raleigh Ti tanium. 

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alotronic replied to BehindTheBikesheds | 6 years ago
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BehindTheBikesheds wrote:

Have you seen this list? https://www.lfgss.com/conversations/133119/

I had seen that list a few years ago, there are some new names there to put on mine, thanks.

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alotronic | 6 years ago
2 likes

I have a long list of UK makers and brands I keep on a spreadsheet as a source for another project that I try to keep up to date. I *think* I have 95% of UK current makers and brands on there... Often I just have the name, but it's a start.

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1-csZNpD16DMTwhtcT0IcQKYbsfc-oKOG...

There are plenty of options in the UK for a design and build. There are also a large number who design in UK and use Italy for builds (Condor, Mason, Racer Rosa to start with).

A

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BehindTheBikesheds | 6 years ago
4 likes

i just missed getting a Roberts 953 custom audax type frameset by a few minutes a couple of weeks ago, one of the last and in absolutely mint condition. Went for £475  on a BIN on fleabay, I could cry as would have preferred this over the Sabbath September I just bought

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cyclisto | 6 years ago
2 likes

I believe that the existence of so many custom bicycle builders is not only a sign of human vanity driven by the desire of something unique.

It is more a sign that huge bicycle manufacturers don't really listen to cyclist's real needs and just try to copy first a small manufacturer's design and then market it as their own innovation.

Big brand guys, we need more bikes based on commuters needs not guys on bib shorts,:EPO and steroids, you will make money and we will get happier.

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jnthnwd | 6 years ago
1 like
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alotronic | 6 years ago
2 likes

Not to forget that several UK makers send to Italy for build - and good ones like Condor...

Here's my list of current custom UK makers (might have a few wrong, edited down from a longer list of all UK brands and makers)

Bob Jackson, Brevet Bicycles,  Burls,  Chicken, Condor, Dear Susan, Demon Frameworks, Donard, Donhou, Ellis Briggs, Enigma, Feather, Field cycles, Filament, Hallett, Hamilton, Hartley, Hewitt, Hinde, Invicta, Ironbridge, Laverjack, Lee Cooper, LD Framework, Longstaff, Mercredi, Mercian, Phoenix, Pilgrims, Pretorious, Quirk cycles, Racer Rosa, Rakshasa,Rielley, Rusby, Sabbath, Saffron, Shand, Stanforth, Stayer, Stebles, Sven, Swallow, Ted James, Temple, Titmarsh (Toad), Vernon Barker, Varonha, Wilson, Woodrup, Yates.

If you've never seen a Dear Susan frame you can't call yourself a bike nut  3

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LarryDavidJr | 6 years ago
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mingmong | 6 years ago
1 like

All filth heart

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clayfit | 6 years ago
2 likes

I have a Crema Schotter steel-framed gravel bike, first seen at Eurobike 2015.  It's a great one-bike-to-do-it all and is also innovative- through axles, flat mount brakes, oversized tubes, curves for heel clearance.  And the brazings are as smooth as a baby's bottom.

Crema (Ken Bloomer) has some nice frames including the Doma, the lightest steel frame tested by Tour Magazine in Germany, at 1600g.  Worth a look if you're in the marker for bespoke steel.

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davenportmb | 6 years ago
2 likes

Shout out to Tom Sturdy at sturdycycles.com!

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