Summer 2024 - Lead Times, shows, making moves!

Wow, 15 years! Where did that go?

What a year it has been so far. From seeing some of the most beautiful bikes I have ever built leaving the workshop, two shows in the past three weeks on opposite sides of the planet, launching an entirely new brand showcasing a line of stunning customisable bikes, an imminent move into a much larger premises and even bigger plans post move, 2025 is destined to be the biggest and busiest yet for me.

First of all, I will give a bit of insight into WKNDR, a new brand and line of bikes I recently launched. Over the last few years, custom build pricing has steadily been increasing and as someone who first and foremost loves riding bikes, I wanted to be able to offer amazing handmade bike to people just like me. I also wanted to put my experience as a rider, designer and fabricator into something much more than just knowledge. With WKNDR(pronounced weekender), I am able to build customisable bikes much more efficiently and economically than I can at Feather Cycles. Using a framework designed using my 15 years experience as a custom builder, WKNDR has allowed me to design and build the bikes which myself, and just about any other avid bike rider will just want to jump on and ride, all the while maintaining the time to build beautiful custom bikes to the requirements and tastes of Feather Cycles customers.

Having more space is going to really improve my ability to spend more time building frames. We will build a bike fit and design studio, a proper office, a show room/lounge area which will be fully open to the public and we will eventually take on a bike mechanic to offer servicing and repairs to all bikes as well as assemble Feather and WKNDR bikes, something I have always done myself but which doesn’t optimise my time. Visits to the paint shop 20-30 times per year will be less frequent with new plans, spending time away from the workshop to attend bike fits will no longer absorb up to 30 days per year, both of these things account to a LOT of time wasted, but both I feel have been essential to the hands on and sometimes obsessive nature of the business. Alongside Feather and WKNDR, we will also showcase and sell Pacenti wheels, Restrap bikepacking gear and Sixty8 Apparel, as well as our own line of softgoods. Finally, we will be offering bike box hire for those wishing to fly with their bikes and will offer a packing demonstration for those new to taking their bikes abroad.

I recently visited Australia for the first time. I was invited as guest builder for Spoken, the Australian handmade bike show. An absolute honour and huge privilege. I took a stunning Feather and the WKNDR ‘OMNEi’, both bikes were received incredibly with the WKNDR being repeatedly tokened as “my favourite bike of the show”. Of course, I was thrilled! I can’t thank Nathan and his team enough for the hospitality and everyone who exhibited or visited the show for their warm welcome. I cant wait for next time!

Two weeks later, I showed at Bespoked in Manchester. I found the previous two Bespoked shows a little bit uninspiring, but I soon realised at the Manchester show just how much of an impact the venue has on a show like this, and I truly felt like it really got its spark back. I loved the entire weekend and I think the guys at Bespoked have something really special going on. As well as tons of cool bikes, one of the highlights for me was the Trans Pyrenees Race movie by Micheal Drummond. It had been about 6 weeks since I had really thrown my leg over the toptube of a bike and the move got me super fired up to ride again. During the movie evening, myself and 6 others each gave a presentation about our unique businesses utilising 20 of our own photos for 21 seconds plus a mystery photo to discovery our whit.

Whilst I was at Bespoked, and I’m aware I also posted about this back in 2020, it became very apparent after at least a dozen people said they had wanted to contact me about a bike failed to do so due to what seems like a big misconception that I have anywhere from a 2-3.5 year lead time. It’s common knowledge that the last few years have been difficult due to parts delays following the pandemic. I have been very affected by this on a handful of occasions, even right now, but things are really beginning to stabilise now. My current lead time is between 9-12 months for Feather depending on the availability of parts and complexity of paint design. Generally, more complex paint schemes will take a little longer following the fabrication of the frame. For WKNDR, you can simply choose your preferred build month for completion two months later.

If you are considering ordering a Feather or a WKNDR, please contact us via the respective websites and Sally will book you in for an initial 30 minute call.

STRANGE OLD TIMES

First of all, I hope everyone is doing well doing well with everything we have had going on the past year.

In all honesty, I thought it’d be the end of Feather Cycles last March. It had been a fairly quiet couple of years and I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t a touch worried. As it happens, I have had the busiest year I have had in around 5 years or so. I say this in more of an extremely grateful and relieved way than in a braggadocios one. I have been thanking my lucky stars. As with so many small businesses, I was entitled to no Covid-19 support from the government and so to say I am thankful to those who have ordered over the past year would be a massive understatement.

The test for me has actually happened more recently due to the shortage of bike parts available, and I’m probably speaking for every builder and shop in the UK when I going this up. Once again though, my customers have been super understanding and incredibly supportive through this.

As a result of this, I have had to implement a bit of a change to the ordering process for new builds. Things aren’t changing entirely, but if you are interested in ordering a build this year I will very happily talk you through the changes I am having to temporarily make in order for builds to run smoothly. Please call or email me if you would like to chat about a bike, and I will do the explaining and answer any questions you may have.

Aside from business, one of the highlights of the past year for us here at Feather HQ is that we finally adopted another dog. Rusty came to us from Bulgaria via Wild At Heart Foundation and has been an absolute diamond of a little brother to our rescue collie Skye. He’s a super cheeky one and fully thinks he rules the roost, so fits in perfectly with us.

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In more important bike related news, there are going to be some way overdue updates to the website in the next week or so. Starting with James’ stunning modern classic. Click the image below to see more and read about James’ build.

For now, I will be keeping the lugs crisp and the fillets smooth.

Take care out there people!

2019 RECAP

First of all, Happy New Year!!

2019, what a year! The year began for me thinking I would be moving into a larger work space with the potential to bring paint in house, have a great space for a studio for design and photography, potential to have bikes on display for the public to come and view as well as an actual working toilet and sustainable dry heating. Unfortunately, the plug was pulled by the current tenant who decided to stay at the last minute. Regardless, I was happy with my current set up and was happy to continue as I were. 

Anyway, a few months go by and I was approached by my landlord who told me they were selling my workshop and that it was going to auction with just 6 weeks notice. I made an offer, it was accepted and I head to the bank and solicitor and a week later, the landlords solicitor advices they take the workshop to auction and not sell to me. It’s probably the most stressful thing I have ever endured. As anyone who builds custom bikes will know, we don’t have capital falling out of our ears and so moving into a new workshop with nearly no notice seemed almost impossible. All kinds of things were going through my mind as to how I would take the business forward, especially having recently bought a house and having real grown-up responsibilities, no qualifications or alternative career to fall back made me feel like the world was on my shoulders.

In the end, I found myself in a very lucky position and was able to build a custom workshop for a fraction of the price I would have paid for the old workshop and design it to suit exactly what I do and how I work. At almost half the size of my last workshop I was really worried it would be too small; even after drawing a floor plan, but in the end it has turned out absolutely perfect. It is the most efficient workshop I have ever worked in. Everything is at almost arms reach, it is so small that it forces you to be tidy and as anyone who works on the tools will know, a tidy bench is a tidy mind. Ultimately, it’s the happiest I have ever been at the bench and has meant that I have already produced some of my best work to date in just 3 months of moving in.

Meanwhile as all this was going on, we were planning a 10 year anniversary event and designing 10 year anniversary kit, which was super exciting as I have never offered any kit for sale before. It turned out absolutely stunning and I couldn’t have been happier with the outcome. Thanks a ton to Sam Hodgson and Rapha for helping make this happen. I was also incredibly lucky to be the chosen builder of a couple of Trans Continental Race bikes for a couple of riders, they happened to be two of the coolest bikes I have ever built.

The 10 Year Anniversary event went so much better than I ever could have expected. It probably wouldn’t have even happened if it wasn’t for the amazing efforts put in by Sally, it was basically her event about me. Pretty terrible on my behalf. I was more focused on the kit and the collaboration beer I brewed with Brew York, a local craft ale brewery where a really old mate of mine, Mat, works. We had over 10% of the bikes I have ever built there on the day, with about 25 out on the road for the owners ride. We rode around 45 miles, just north of HQ and took in some great local landmarks including Byland Abbey and The White Horse bank in Kilburn. Thanks to all my customers and friends and family who attended the day, you made it incredibly special. I would also like to thanks my friend Nick who came to take some photos at the event. These will be added soon as I lost them in an incident mentioned further down this post. You can see a bunch of photos taken by Jon Woodroof of TwoTone fame.

For the month of August, I was asked to display some bikes at the Rapha pop-up in Leeds, followed by a private event on the closing evening showing my most recent work. Thanks again to Rapha for thinking of me.

In September, we were lucky enough to witness the UCI World Championships right here in Yorkshire. On the eve of the Elite women and mens road race events, I was kindly asked by Katusha to join them at their pop-up in Harrogate to have a bit of a meet and greet and chat to people about my bikes and what I can offer. I had a great evening and met some brilliant future customers.

As far as actually cycling this year, there wasn’t much of it. A family trip to Tuscany with Sally’s family was the best block of cycling I did all year and it was an absolute pleasure to get out into the mountains with Sally’s brother, Tom, who was also on his Feather to make it extra special. Otherwise, I have been making a huge effort to take my customers for a ride on my local roads when they collect their bikes. There is no better feeling than watching my happy customers ride the bike I created for them, especially here on the roads I know like the back of my hand but which are completely new to most of my customers. I also dug out the BMX too and did a little riding on that after years of it being sat in the shed.

Later on in the year, things picked back up at the bench having moved into the new workshop and went incredibly well all the way until Christmas, I have built some lovely bikes and worked on some stunning paint designs with Jack. I can’t wait to share more of what we have been working on recently later this month once things pick back up. There was one last blunder when I found at the end of December that my laptop had decided it would stop working, along with the hard drive it was backed up on. Luckily, there was a few essentials backed up on another hard drive, so thankfully, not everything has gone.

2020 is looking great for the next 3 months and hopefully things will pick up even more going into the summer. I just purchased a new computer, so it feels like a true fresh start and a good excuse to get the admin just as organised as the workshop. I’m super excited about this year and seeing what it brings. I hope you all have a great decade!!

WELCOME

Welcome to the new Feather Cycles website. Over the last year or so, I have had a lot of people ask me when there will be an update on the website and as much as I would have like to have said ‘in a few days’, I knew that was never going to happen. Things have been super busy in the workshop.

For me as a craftsman I have had my head deeply involved in improving my process and expanding my knowledge on the tools. My current work load took huge priority and the online side of things has been way behind on the backseat for a while.

Anyway, a few weeks ago, I decided it was time for a way, way overdue update to my online presence and set myself the goal of building my own website. The whole thing was completely new to me and taking the challenge head on is just one more addition to my portfolio of how to run a modern business.

Having the website finished feels like a huge accomplishment, especially considering I have also been doing nearly full days in the workshop at the same time as working on this. Maybe this week, I will once again feel like a normal human being for the first time in a couple of months.

Below I have posted a few of my favourite builds from the last year or so that unfortunately weren’t photographed in the studio. I have just equipped myself with everything I need to photograph every build going forward, but this is a little taster of my most recent work.

Over the next few weeks, I plan on posting a TBT every Thursday featuring the things that have excited me most over the last 9 or so years, so keep your eyes out for these.

I hope you enjoy the new site and I will leave you with a little blog post by SiS CEO, Stephen Moon, about the first step in the process to getting your own custom bike. This will be an ongoing series of posts, so check back in with Stephen’s blog as and when you get the chance.