bikeworkshop
Old School Grand Master
Up to the (mid?) 90s, branding of cycles was reasonably discreet, and tended to stick to the major parts.
The frame decals would probably be less than a quarter of the tube diameter, a discreet postage-stamp label on the rims, tidy shimano logo with groupset level name on the major components.
Look at it now:
https://www.retrobike.co.uk/threads/update-narrow-wide-chainring-180°-flip.489076/page-4#post-3686175
Nobody said:
"That looks brilliant - keep it"
Meaningless branding attached to any component with a visually significant surface area!
Do we dislike this stuff because we are aesthetically attached to our own little "golden age"?
Do we dislike shouty branding elsewhere, like on our clothes, food packaging, even the workplace?
Is it connected with the rise in bold tattoos on those parts of the body we can freely display in public?
Secondly, why did it come about?
Do we blame Specialized?
I think trek did some fairly huge frame decals early on... especially with the arrival of oversized aluminium as frame material.
Were they making up for just having a 4 letter name?
Deep carbon rims became billboards pdq.
Where will it end?
The frame decals would probably be less than a quarter of the tube diameter, a discreet postage-stamp label on the rims, tidy shimano logo with groupset level name on the major components.
Look at it now:
https://www.retrobike.co.uk/threads/update-narrow-wide-chainring-180°-flip.489076/page-4#post-3686175
Nobody said:
"That looks brilliant - keep it"
Meaningless branding attached to any component with a visually significant surface area!
Do we dislike this stuff because we are aesthetically attached to our own little "golden age"?
Do we dislike shouty branding elsewhere, like on our clothes, food packaging, even the workplace?
Is it connected with the rise in bold tattoos on those parts of the body we can freely display in public?
Secondly, why did it come about?
Do we blame Specialized?
I think trek did some fairly huge frame decals early on... especially with the arrival of oversized aluminium as frame material.
Were they making up for just having a 4 letter name?
Deep carbon rims became billboards pdq.
Where will it end?
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