Bart gave me the Urban Kreation jeans to test them. I've seen the name Urban Kreation appear on the internet but most new companies selling clothes are just another companies with the same products, just different designs. I kind of always struggled a bit with finding the ideal jeans for riding and wearing pads underneath them. The design is nice and simple and the fitting is great. The jeans are pretty stretchy and because of that it fits well around your pads without limiting your movement. The jeans gives me personally a safe feeling because they are a little bit thicker that normal jeans. On the inside of the jeans they have extra layers for protection and even Kevlar in front where you will normally tear your jeans while crashing or missing the pedals. Yes, it's a lot warmer when it's hot outside compared to normal jeans but when wearing pads there's no big difference.
The folks at Tree have decided to make a 3/8″ bolt version of their current rear hub. This hub is for all the trails, pegless street, and park riders out there who just want to run 3/8″ axles. It has all the same features of their current hub but comes with a 17mm 7075 T6 aluminum center axle and 3/8″ heat treated steel bolts. With a 9T cog it weighs only 370grams/13.2 ounces! Tree have a couple of new hubs available and one for racing too.
Earlier this week I was at a big Carrefour near Arcachon in France. I stepped into a Presse store to check what BMX mags were available. They had two: A.R.T. number three (which I bought because it had the new FATBMX.com advertisement in there) and a copy of Soul BMX (#70). I left that one at the stands. But today the new issue hit the market so I'll be checking again. Issue #71 has Kevin Kalkoff on the cover dropping into a bank in Biarritz, a town that's on the schedule for next week.
This years Monster Energy – Ride to Glory featured the talents of Verde, Nike 6.0, Dub, Lotek and last years winners BSD. The whole trip started out in a rain soaked Leeds, then made its way around all 4 corners of the country and came to an end at a now infamous swimming pool location in London. After talking with the teams and getting the lowdown on went went on, the only word best to describe the week long road trip was… immense. As per usual this issue comes packed full of RTG content with the added bonus of the RTG DVD cover mounted, filmed by some of the best videographers the BMX world has to offer. As well as the 50+ pages of Ride To Glory goings on, Issue154 is also packed with the usual regular; news, facts, products, Top 5’s – Simone Barraco, Room 101 – Mike Jersey Taylor and a Bike Check – Lima’s Verde Cartel Series 2.
The easiest thing to do is to do nothing. Let others dig the jumps, you ride it. Let others organise an event and you show up and just ride. Let others find the spots and you just show up. Let others maintain the skatepark and you just show up, ride and go home. But don't expect to get respect if you're living that way. Don't expect others to go out of their way to help you out. It's give and take. The easiest thing is to be lazy and complain all day long, or hide behind the computer screen and post silly comments that only you think are funny.
At The Pool contest in Dagenham the media was invited to build their own pair of shoes on the Nike ID computers. A designer was there to help lead you through the process and showed what shoes you could pick, which sole, what colours were available etc. After my first pair of ID shoes failed to come out in orange (they were bright pink) I had my mind set on a pair of shoes that represented my the colour of my native
This book by photographer Keith Terra is layed out over 152 pages that are 10x8 inches in size and consists of images seen through his lens over the past 12 years of his photographic life. Inside you will find photos having to do with BMX, music, portraits, and landscapes. Featuring BMX riders such as Brian Foster, Chris Stauffer, Mark Mulville, Mike
The contents list of DIG MAGAZINE ISSUE 83
After doing a BMX 'zine for ten years (1987 - 1996) FATBMX made it on the internet. The year was 1998. Here to stay.