Lowriding began as a cultural element of Chicano Americans, part of the street culture of the American barrio where Mexican immigrants maintained a entertaining urban culture. Lowrider bikes, one of the most fantastic and unique products of this culture, are a cross in the middle of the Harley and the cruiser bike, decorated with paint and chrome and streamers, found in any all-American hometown parade.
[b]Bike Review[/b]As you might surmise, lowriding bikes hug the ground. The top points on a lowrider bike are practically always its two hand grips, just like you might find on its motorized cousin, the Harley motorcycle. The seat of a lowrider bike is down at wheel level and its pedals are sometimes higher than the seat! These bikes are typically a very individualized creation. Most of them are ridden with broad pride by their creators, although you can buy some thorough models and a few explicate models in a good bike store, especially in cities of the American West.
Despite the fact that these bikes originated within the poverty of the barrio, lowrider bikes are anything but cheap. Makers of these one-of-a-kind creations regard their bicycles as much as an artwork and a mechanical marvel as a means of transportation, though part of the joy of creation has always been parading them down the street when completed--these are not pieces of art meant for life in dusty museums, for the most part. Each part is commonly determined selected for its utility as well as its beauty, with the resulting bike a fantastic example of technical and artistic ingenuity.
Lowrider bikes are becoming a proximity in more and more cities, possibly made more "respectable" among the affluent bicyclists who drive the market by the increasing popularity of their cousin, the recumbent bicycle. As the baby boomer generation ages and feels increasing twinges of back pain riding on the dropped handlebars of road bikes, expect to see more and more lowrider and recumbent bikes alike.
And once you get your first basic lowrider bike, don't be too surprised if you find yourself flipping through the real or online pages of a lowrider parts catalog musing, "Hmm. I wonder how that golden sprocket would look on my bike?" Lowrider bikes have a tradition of creative adornment and technical improvisation that calls out the artist and the inventor in many of us.
What, really, could be best to evoke, especially if you're already a bike rider?
Lowrider Bikes History
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