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U.S. Built Bicycles in Titanium and Carbon-Titanium Mix

The Enigmatic and Sincerely Fast Giovani

riding the Seven Giro Limited Edition Resolute SLX

Right now, our good friends at Cascade Bicycle Studio in Seattle are running a daily contest in concert with a mutual friend of ours, a quixotic Italian pro named Giovani.

Having not made his team’s Giro d’Italia roster (again), he is training in the misty hills of his adopted American home, and every day he posts his times for various routes. If riders, everyday schlubs like us, can beat his time, then a prize can be retrieved from CBS.

Seven Giro Limited Edition Bike

Now, not all of us can get to Seattle, and even if we could, a formidably strong rider like Giovani is tough to beat, BUT even if you can’t be there, it’s worth following along, if only for Gio’s commentary and photos.

Seven Giro Limited Edition Bike

“sun shines on #cbsgirobike except for days of rain”

Our erstwhile Italian friend is riding the special edition Giro Bike we built with the guys at CBS a few seasons back.

For Riders

Two smiling night cyclists posing with their Sevens

One of the natural and best outcomes of building bikes the way we do is the relationships we have with our customers. We get to know them, both through the design interview and through ongoing correspondence. We are fortunate to receive a lot of photos and a lot of thank you notes. Most Sevens are on the road more than a decade, so we have occasion to work with our riders on refinishes, upgrades, and general service questions. Many of them come back for more than one bike. We design around their evolving bodies and their evolving interests, and we get to know them in that way, too.

It is not often that a customer calls and their name doesn’t ring a bell with someone here.

Because each Seven is different, certain paint jobs stick in our minds, so that when we see them, months or years later, we remember the person who rides the bike. Often they are friends or family of other Seven riders, and that is another way to make connections.

We can’t say enough how gratifying it is to make bikes for people, instead of for “markets,” to know our riders and see how our bikes fit in their lives. In some ways it’s like working on more than a bike with them. It’s like working on their cycling, and that’s part of what makes what we do so worthwhile.

Joe Cruz, the Treeline SL Early Review

Our buddy Joe is a bike-packer of some skill and repute. Regular readers will recall that we built him a Treeline SL recently, in advance of a trip to Alaska (more on that to come). Now that he’s back, we’ve received an early review of the bike that we thought worth sharing.

Treeline SL in the rugged countryside

Hey Seven, 

Though I’ve had the Treeline for over a month, I’d only ever ridden it in Alaska on frozen rivers and snowmobile trails with a full load. It was fantastic in that context, the most perfect adventure bike I’ve been on.  

Treeline SL in the frosty woods

But tonight I joined up with our Thursday Night Mountain Bike Worlds and rode it unladen. Holy s*%t: that bike rips. I pointed it down chaotic corkscrew chunky pitches and it just carves and carves. The geo is brilliant, super fast turning but so easy to throw your hips to stand it back up it seemed like cheating.  So many thanks for your hard work.  

More soon,

Joe

Robert’s Axiom SL

Here’s an Axiom SL we built with our old buddy Karl at True Cyclery in New Haven, CT.

a tall Axiom SL with blasted graphics

Robert writes:

Seven

Karl just delivered my new Axiom SL. It is gorgeous! Thank you for the excellent bike. I was very concerned as you know about the aesthetics of such a big bike, but the design and workmanship was tremendous. And Karl was superb throughout the entire process. You guys made a great team.

Now, I think I feel some sort of flu coming on. I cannot imagine I am going to be able to work in the office for a full day today.

All the best.

Robert

 

 

 

The Future of Clean

One of the best compliments we get about our bikes is that they look clean, which is not to say “not dirty” but that their lines are clean and true and simple. The recent release of SRAM’s eTap components suggests builds are going to get even cleaner. Check out these two very different builds from our friends at Cascade Bicycle Studio, the first an Axiom SL, a straight-ahead road bike with a little bit of Chris King bling to set off the single-color paint job.

Axiom SL painted white with SRAM eTap

Seven Airheart SL with SRAM eTap

Rear fender detail

The second one is a refined 650b Airheart SL travel bike. Matching Brooks leather saddle and bar tape are classy finishing touches, and the travel readiness only begins with the S&S couplers. Check out the split, hammered fender, too. This is a high example of the intersection of form and function. eTap only makes this one easier to pack.