R.O.O.T.M.
(Rider Opinion Of The
Month)
Every month, or so, we give
a team rider carte blanche to sound off, however
they see fit. So, you really never know what
you're gonna get, except yet another reason
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WHY DO
I RUIN MY CLOTHES?
When I was in high school a friend of mine gave
me his brother’s Van Halen concert shirt.
Well maybe he didn’t give it to me exactly,
but I did end up being its owner, so the point
of it being “given” or “stolen”
is moot. So anyways, this shirt was true to
its late eighties hard rockin’ roots;
faded black, bad graphics, and the sleeves had
been removed to emphasize just how hard core
of a rocker the original owner was. Its inclusion
in my teenage wardrobe was the beginning of
a new world of fashion for me.
I started cutting the sleeves off all my T-shirts.
It’s not like I was doing it to show off
my guns or draw attention away from my hair
(which at the time was shaved on the sides,
spiked with gel on top, backed up with a bleached
mullet in full effect). I must have been doing
it because it was just the METAL thing to do.
My mother did not approve of my fine scissor
work, and she often asked me why I was ruining
my clothes. I figured that as long as I was
wearing them I wasn’t ruining anything.
The shirt still served its purpose (which must
be nipple coverage) so I would have to argue
its functionality should have never been called
into question.
Short sleeves don’t do anything other
than hide unsightly armpit hair. If the atmospheric
conditions are of the cold variety you need
long sleeves, but short sleeves are as useless
as ties. I would have to surmise that the same
genius that invented the tie also had a hand
in putting useless sleeves on perfectly good-to-begin-with
sleeveless garments. I guess the only people
to ever figure out a useful function for the
short sleeve would be the Brando-inspired
greasers who would roll their cigarettes up
in them for safe keeping to serve as a badge
of pride, stating “I don’t fear
cancer, I wear it” to the rest of the
world.
Let’s fast forward through my college
years of sleeveless Anthrax and AC/DC shirts
and move onto my post-college years. I just
got into mountain biking, but it was years before
I could afford my first poly-pro jersey. When
I finally got one it was an abomination to mankind
and a sad reflection of the state of cycling
garb in the late nineties. I found it in the
Nashbar returns bin which meant it was cheap
and too ugly for the original owner to actually
wear. Even though it was hideous, I couldn’t
imagine cutting the sleeves off my newly acquired
high performance kit, but I hated shoulder shrouds
all the same. I got to the point where it was
them or me, and since I need me to be me, I
cut them away.
Since then, most of my jerseys have been modified
to fit my very rigorous wardrobe standards.
Superfluous material has hit the floor time
and time again in the name of cool comfort and
metal mentality. Bargain bin finds, purchased
on sale, or race podium schwag… they all
fell victim to the blade.
After I won the 24 Solo Single Speed Worlds
I received an email from Brent at Twin Six asking
me if I would like to rock some thread for T6.
I had to be upfront with him and let him know
that some of the graphics that he and Ryan had
put so much love into creating were going to
be cleaved from the shoulder down. He didn’t
flinch, and my love affair with Twin Six has
continued to this day.
I’ll admit that some of my jerseys have
never seen the pointy end of a pair of shears,
as I do have some common sense. When the temps
are cold it sure is nice when my arm warmers
meet some other material on my body to cover
my pasty skin. Some of the fine duds that Twin
Six has provided me over the years are just
too pretty to circumcise. The sleeves either
have some bold, stand-alone graphics that are
too close to fine art to be shit-canned, or
they are emblazoned with graphics that tie the
jersey together like the rug in Dude’s
living room. I have the guts to fight fashion,
but sometimes even I can’t destroy the
creativity of a couple of artists.
The Dude would understand.
teamdicky |