Online tickets for Bespoked Bristol, the UK's new handbuilt bike show have gone on sale with a 2 for 1 offer if you buy before May 31st. The show takes place on the weekend of June 11 and 12 and tickets will also be available on the door. Online tickets cost £6 (£5 + £1 admin fee), tickets on the door will be £5, but tickets purchased in advance will get priority entry. You can buy tickets via the Bespoked Bristol website www.bespokedbristol.co.uk.
Bespoked Bristol promises to be a superb show with some of the best new and established frame builder from the UK and around the world showing off what they have to offer, (see the full exhibitor list below) and check out our gallery of pics of some of the bikes and other cool stuff you can expect to see.
‘The cutting edge of framebuilding is to be displayed under one roof for the very first time in the UK– established names will be showing alongside the leading new generation of framebuilders. There will be something for everyone - road, track and mountain. The exhibitors can create whatever your heart desires - be it a bike to take you around the world, a pure speed machine or a bike that will do it all. And to help you choose, a panel of judges will be awarding their favourite exhibitors ‘Best of Show’, ‘Best Road’, ‘Best Offroad’, ‘Best Track’ and ‘Best Urban,’’ says Phil Taylor, the man behind Bespoked Bristol.
As well as a wide variety of frames, bikes and kit to look at you'll also get the chance to do a bit of frame building of your own in a competition run by Downland Cycles. Competitors will have to mitre a piece of tubing in 3 minutes using hacksaw and files. The best mitre at end of the weekend wins a place on one of Downland's frame building courses… hey, you could even be back exhibiting yourself in a few year's time.
The show itself demonstrates the remarkable resurgence in interest in handmade bikes that has taken place in the UK over the last few years and it has already spawned another useful spin-off for anyone thinking of having a bike made for themselves with the launch of the Handmade Bicycle Directory and Buyers Guide. The UK edition of this guide will be included in the show catalogue and the full version can be seen online at www.thmbd.com (please note - new frame builders are being added daily and certain areas of the website are still under construction.)
BESPOKED BRISTOL – EXHIBITOR LINE UP
18 Bikes
Axel Imports,– Guru Cycles and Industry 9 components
Brian Rourke
Brother Cycles
The Bicycle Academy
Burls
Condor
Demon Frameworks
Donhou Cycles
Downland Cycles
Enigma
Feather Cycles
The Foot Down
Freshtripe
Peter’s Bike
Hammoon
(iL) Soigneur
Just Riding Along
KCNC
Lee Cooper Custom Frames - John West Custom Paint - Alex Hatfield Concepts
Milk Bikes
Milltag
Paper Bicycle
Paulus Quiros Design
Really Useful Bikes
Rock n Road- Waterford Precision Cycles, Gunnar Cycles
Shutt Velo Rapide
Strada Wheels
Swrve
Synergy action – Delta 7, PowerCordz Cables
Ted James Designs
Tokyo Fixed - Tonic, Nagasawa
Villiers-Velo
“When I chased them up, they said they planned to do nothing about it, despite having crystal clear evidence of what had happened. Their reasoning...
I thought they were wanting them to stop large vehicles parking - most notably caravans that people live in. As the planters are on the road, they...
According to the review, the bike is a bit vanilla. ...
https://bikesnobnyc.com/2023/03/07/soft-rides-demand-hard-people/
Just wait until UK authorities find out about the Dunwich Dynamo...
Their overshoe sizing table is completely wrong. My feet are not particularly big and I needed the XXL size to fit over some specialized BG shoes....
I'm guessing a lot of students choose to live at home because of the cost, commuting a fair distance, student digs too cost at least £650 pcm - ...
Many manufacturers, including Scribe, can give you methods to reduce the noise level. On Scribe, and other ratchet designs it's usually just adding...
Pretty sure AI could skim through hours of footage in a few seconds to identify suspicious events. Of course someone in authority has to care in...
Bonsai samurai? Or is it just a case of "they seem to get smaller every year"?