RIDE ALONG WITH CHELSEA WEIDINGER Jan 25, 2016 Categories: Cyclocross 0 Comment “I’d already set the goal in my head that I was going to be the first girl on MASH. I don’t know how it’s going to happen, but it’s going to happen.” – Chelsea Weidinger Jen wrote a nice interview with Chelsea over at The Radavist. Check in for the full story!
OAKLEY MASH 10 YEAR FROGSKIN Jan 20, 2016 Categories: MASH Frames 0 Comment Our final collaboration celebrating 10 years, is with Oakley. Never could I have imagined we could collaborate with these innovators, but here we are. The Oakley MASH Frogskins are an everyday frame, intensely durable, and treated in our colors , lens etch, and micro bag for the occasion. As a photo/videographer, I make an effort to protect my eyes, and feel so lucky to have that protection from legends. Limited to 85 pieces to the public, and going quick.
PATH: ERIK ZO Jan 11, 2016 Categories: MASH, Photo 0 Comment Oh, how the years go by . . . In 1976, when I was 11 years-old, I was given a 24” wheeled sew-up clad Frejus track bike. I had been racing on the road for 4 years starting with a 20” sew-up wheeled Legnano, next moving on to a Coppi with the same sized wheels. The road bike I was riding when I got the Ferjus was a 24” wheeled Coppi loaned to me by the Murphy Family. John W. Murphy, the head of the family, ran a bicycle importing company down on Shipley St. in SOMA. It’s where his three daughters and I played while the adults worked. Yeah… I grew up in a bike shop. John also started the bicycle coalition . . . and well, that led to The Golden Gate Bridge being open on the west side to bicycles and Golden Gate Park being closed on Sundays to cars. I also remember how the day after I got the Frejus, an old git came in on an orange Cinelli track bike clad with fenders and panniers. Out of his bags, he pulled out a stack of records and a bunch of cogs secured with a Binda toestrap, and said, “ Hey kid, now that you have a fixed gear, you need these”. The toe strap had inch pitch cogs on it from six teeth to eleven and half by eighth cogs from thirteen to twenty-four teeth. The records— Louis Cottrell trio (I played clarinet as a child!) Stan Getz at Le Hot Club, and Django Reinhardt, as well as a smattering of big band and Dixieland—all discs, any “Jazzman” would approve of. At this point, the track bike was a natural progression in my racing. Because my parents had to keep our shop open on weekends, some customers on the shop team “The Golden Gate Wheelman” would take me with them to the races; the track bike allowed me to ride in events on the banks at Hellyer Park in San Jose. Fast forward thirty-five years or so . . . I am riding down Market street heading towards Fifth Street and 3 teens or maybe even preteens roll by, swaying at the bottom of each stroke to reach their pedals from their seats that are on their top tubes. As the light turns yellow the oldest one yells, “MASH IT!” — I realize they are all on fixes— and they sprint through the intersection leaving me at the crosswalk. Red light. I was remembering how back in 1985 the only fixed gear rider I met the whole year was a P.I. who had moved from New York. Then, Berlin 1993, and it’s the first Cycle Messenger Championships. There are 5 messengers who brought track bikes, the internet still did not have a web browser and maybe 50 out of 500 of those messengers knew what the internet was or even had an address there (clarify). And of course, before you could say “myspace”, all that had changed. Within a few years, the Messenger World Championships had put the fixed wheel under messengers from every city that partook; and that placed the “Fixie” in the eye of the youth in urban areas. It’s a short stretch from there to plot the number of members in the myspace fixed gear army group against the production numbers of bicycles with rear facing dropouts. What I am saying is that the fixed gear meme may be the first global youth trend to grow with the power of the internet. It gave the youth a look at the freedom and exhilaration of a vehicle anyone can understand… and they couldn’t resist. Ten years pass in no time at all, but, it’s amazing what can be accomplished in such a short amount of time. MASH the movie, led to a team, shop, and projects, but most importantly, a community is part of that whole mix. MASH is the old man with the pile of records and the strap of cogs. MASH is this book..and so many more stories yet to be written. EZ
GIRO X MASH SYNTHE HELMET Jan 9, 2016 Categories: MASH, STORE 0 Comment We just received a batch of Giro Synthe helmets with the 10 Year treatment. Matte/Gloss Black, with Silver, Charcoal, and Gold details. Available in Small, Medium, and Large.
MASH 2015 VIDEO RENTAL AVAILABLE NOW Jan 6, 2016 Categories: MASH, Video 0 Comment For 2016, we wanted to offer a streaming service for the full length video. If you purchase the book/video, you own the movie. Shipping the book around the world can be costly. Now you can rent the movie for $5.00 on Vimeo. It is an HD file, with a 24 hour rental period. Enjoy! RENT MASH SF 2015 NOW!
CHAS CHRISTIANSEN X MASH 10 YEAR Jan 6, 2016 Categories: Cinelli, MASH 0 Comment Fall 2015 created so many memories for us, as we traveled, and set up events to share the new book and video release. Once we were back on the ground, the Cinelli MASH 10 year Parallax frames arrived at our shop. This frame is really special for the team. It is 100% their input for the geometry. Garrett Chow designed the art work for all of the 10 year pieces, with the frame being the crown jewel. Chas had been planning his build for months, getting all of the components lined up. He is supported by Zipp, so they custom drilled him a set of 32 hole rims and laced them to the Phil Wood MASH hubs. The build is finished with Izumi, MKS, Cadence, Continental, Newbaum’s, and San Marco. For all of the effort that went into 2015, it is really powerful to see a race machine like this live on for years to come. TCB #3: 99 of these frame sets where produced by Cinelli. The first 10 went to the team. MASH has #1, Garrett has #2, and Chas has #3.