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IN A STYLISH move for folderdom, Bike Friday teamed its most fashionable urban accessory – the tikitTM - with hot young fashion designer Telfar Clemens at the launch of his Spring/Summer 2009 range, "Breathe". The Gal frocked up and headed east to compile this report from the runway ...
![]() tikitTM+TELFAR MULTIMEDIA by the Galfromdownunder PHOTO GALLERY Small wheels, tall models MOVIE CLIPS Playlist RELATED LINKS Dazed Digital Report featuring a nice aerial shot of the tikits in action |
Telfar Clemens is a 23 year young model and graduate designer who decided folding bicycles would be a perfect accessory to his Spring/Summer '09 range of edgy, Olympics-inspired sportswear. From the press release: |
![]() "Because TELFAR is inspired this season by sports and the Olympics, we chose to work with a company who created folding bikes. Telfar creates simplexity by using fashion as part of one's function. Folding Bikes like Bike Friday are a perfect function for Manhattan's fast life." Simplexity? According to Wiki, it's "an emerging theory that proposes a possible complementary relationship between complexity and simplicity. The term draws from General Systems Theory, Dialectics (philosophy) and Design." According to Dazed Digital, whose mike was bigger than mine at the apres-show clamor, "it's the sport of taking something simple, but adding different dimensions to it to create something entire new with just a snap, button, zip, twist, fold, or tuck." (Thank you to DD for those kilobytes). Sounds just like a Bike Friday – we took a simple bicycle and, with a nip and a tuck – you’re flying! Thus began a collaboration between two designers from opposite coasts with a common ... simplexity. We shipped five 8-speed hyperfold tikits to the Big Apple – green, orange, yellow, red, and pink, each monogrammed with a special Telfar logo made by BF production guy Don Person on his special decal machine. Our downtown dealer David Lam of bfold.com snapped them together and we set off for the pre-show casting. |
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3x Bike Friday owner, photographer and online billards aficionado, Wei Chao, got wind of the show and came along to shoot some great stills with his serious camera. We sat through a dazzling parade of Calvin Klein and Donna Karan posterchildren, all with apparently <1% body fat, watching Telfar and his stylist JJ flip through their portfolios, eyeing their gait. What were they looking for? |
![]() "Athleticism … charisma!" he grinned. We had grand ideas of getting them to fold and unfold the bikes in unison like a synchronized Shriners parade, but the hyperfold tikit does require a little practice to get the fast-fold into muscle-memory, and none of the models quite mastered it in short time available. I also learned a valuable secret from these models as to how to wear impossibly high heels in comfort - arrive in flats with the high heels in a bag, slip them on while perched on a barstool/dining/draped over a Ferrari, then when you leave, put your flat shoes back on again! Imelda Marcos here I go ... Several auditions later Wei and I started feeling short and dumpy, so fittingly, we nipped out to gorge on authentic Fukien dumplings at a lower East Side no-name. I'd been raving about the Peking Duck Dumplings at Rickshaw but admittedly "10 dumplings for $3, 50 frozen for $8, how can you beat that?" was a sub-prime blues buster. |
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The venue for the parade was an old St Patrick's Cathedral gym in Soho, ingeniously transformed into a stylized tennis court with the aid of Astroturf, green linoleum and some white and yellow marker tape. Telfar's cousin Cedelia brought her Honda Accord to bfold and we bundled the bikes into her car. What's not to love about a five-second folder? The gym basement was a flurry of powder, toned bodies and artifical sweat – a shiny substance make up artists were spraying over arms, legs, washboard tummies. "To make me look like I' been workin' out," said Celia, a statuesque black gal just back from Paris (I no longer use the term African-American after the last two people I applied it to turned out to be Jamaican). |
![]() The clothes, once off the racks and onto human hangers, made for compelling viewing: a stylized white tennis dress with intriguing cutaways and copius pockets - big enough for beginner's quota of dropped tennis balls. An intriguing pair heeled sneakers with a half tennis ball for the heel. Therapeutic knee and arm braces used as jewelry. A male girdle you'd wear when you have absolutely no need for one. Possibly the highlight of the show was a screaming red, retro one-piece male swimsuit that only the 6'3", 17-year-young Adonis who modeled it could pull off (or have someone do that for him, slowly) - yeeeeeeeeeeeeow! I know I instantly wanted one of Telfar's tie-up ballcaps – perfect for under my bike helmet since my visor went missing … |
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Inside, three dudes who looked like they'd stepped out of a Boyz 'N the Hood meets Saturday Nite Fever remake held pole position around a bench. Who were they? Telfar's friends? VIPs? Sponsors? Anna Wintour's sub-editors? Nopedy-nope, but that wasn't stopping them. "Assertion!" said #1 in the Afro-Elvis coif. "You gotta take what's yours!" said #3 in the slouched-just-so black beanie and diamente sunglasses, punching the air with a blinged finger – and issuing probably the most sage career advice of the week. (See movie clip for this trio in action). |
![]() And then the chattering was silenced by a boom of electronica from the sound system. With the audience sat in three rows of seats facing outwards around the room, the models entered and … walked expertly around the room. |
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Now if you've ever watched fashion parades you'll note that that's all models seem to do - walk, pause briefly and then walk off – "so as not to detract from the clothes". However, I couldn't help but think with the strident music, the artificial sweat, the cavernous gym surrounds and athletic clothes, some leaping, cavorting, touch footballing and tennis racqueting would have hit the sweet spot. But what do I know … I do know that when the five tikits came careening through the stage door for the grand finale it was a real highlight, and I knew we'd made a solid contribution to the show. |
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The music deserves special mention. I'm a huge fan of avante-garde electronica, but not much turns my crank unless it's utterly fresh or utterly appropriate (one of the pitfalls of spending time as a Creative Director of a Saatchi & Saatchi Advertising office is you get permanent ADD about anything and everything), but if you only go to one MySpace page, make it Fatima Al Qadiri's. She's classically trained musician and it shows. The opening theme, called "Symphonic Diet Rave", I've roughly sampled to open and close the movie clip of the show. I understand we're sending 5 more tikits for Telfar's repeat performance in LA. Holy helmet! Next you'll be seeing us in GQ. (Wait, we've been in GQ …) Viva la fashionable folder! - The Galfromdownunder Thank you to Telfar and his team, Kelly Mills, Wei Chao, David Lam, Hanna Scholz and everyone who got us on the red carpet. Well, green astro turf. The Telfar tikits, (8-speed, hyperfold medium size) will be for sale as collector's items from our NY downtown dealer David Lam of Bfold. - LC |













