My answer to your notion of a market for factory beausaged Rivendells
is "I certainly hope not". Not knowing anything about the musical
instrument world does not prevent me from offering the opinion that
this entire concept sounds pretentious in the extreme. I envision
this rich guy with this "new-old" guitar spinning some BS yarn about
playing it in his rock band in the 60s or something.
I like to think that people buy Rivs to ride, not put away as
collectibles. A bike gets its fair share of beausage even if ridden
moderately and well cared for. Ride a few thousand miles a year &
ship it around a bit, hop on'n'off a few buses & trains, and they get
thoroughly beat looking wihin a decade.
Of course, one of the ironies of owning a Riv is the occassional
inquiry "So how old is that thing, anway?". When I bought my
Atlantis, it was because I could load it down for a tour or go out
wandering on fire trails. Never thought of it as an old bike, just
one with the versatility I wanted.
dougP
On Sep 21, 6:54 pm, lungimsam <
john11.2...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hello everyone,
>
> You all have been around Riv-culture longer than I. I was wondering what
> your opinion is of Rivendell having a custom line of factory relic-ed
> (beausaged, in Riv-speak) frames one day. Is there a market for it?
>
> Let me explain:
> In the guitar and bass instrument retail world, makers manufacture special
> lines of their instruments, called "relic-ed", for high prices.
> People seem to lust over these and pay thousands upon thousands for them.
> The reliced versions have chipped, worn off paint, down to bare wood; aged
> hardware (rusted and oxidized metal parts); and discolored, "aged" plastic
> parts. This is done at the factory on a new instrument.
> So, you can have a guitar that looks well played and 40 years old, if you
> think that looks nice.
>
> Personally, I prefer to do all "relicing" myself to my instruments (and
> bikes), through years of lovingly playing (riding) and using them. So I
> like to buy new, standard models.
>
> But there is a *HUGE* market for this in the guitar world.