Description
Author Paul D'Orleans, Photography by Michael Lichter, ISBN: 9780760345825, Hardcover, 224 pages.
A photographic chronology of some of the fastest, most stylish, and most individualized bikes in motorcycling history. Originally used as a slur against riders who used hopped-up motorcycles to travel from one transport café to another, café racer describes a bike genre that first became popular in 1960s British rocker subculture - although the motorcycles were also common in Italy, France, and other European countries. The rebellious rock-and-roll counterculture is what first inspired these fast, personalized, and distinctive bikes, with their owners often racing down public roads in excess of 100 miles per hour ("ton up" in British slang), leading to their public branding as "ton-up boys." Café Racers traces café racer motorcycles from their origins in the mid-twentieth century all the way into modern times, where the style has made a recent comeback in North America and Europe alike, through the museum-quality portraiture of top motorcycle photographer Michael Lichter and the text of motorcycle culture expert Paul d'Orléans. Chronologically illustrated with fascinating historical photography, the book travels through the numerous ever-morphing and unique eras of these nimble, lean, light, and head-turning machines. Café Racers visually celebrates a motorcycle riding culture as complex as the vast array of bikes within it.
Michael Lichter Since the early 1980s, Michael Lichter has been photographing custom motorcycles—often hanging from the beds of pickup trucks during rainstorms or photographing packs of bikers in such places as Daytona Beach, Florida, and Sturgis, South Dakota—for the pages of Easyriders magazine. He has written and provided photography for a number of books, and he lives and works in Boulder, Colorado.
Paul d'Orleans Best known as publisher of the Vintagent website, d'Orleans travels the world following the vintage motorcycle scene, from rides in France and concorsi in Italy to auctions in England and club events in the United States. As a rider, collector, and recognized expert on moto-history, he is a passionate advocate for old motorcycles and writes for numerous magazines, websites, and club journals worldwide. He also emcees events and auctions, judges Concours d'Elegance events, co-founded the Yerba Buena chapter of the Antique Motorcycle Club of America, and consults for Bonhams auction house. He splits his time between his native San Francisco, his new home in New York City, and his former homes in Paris and London.