- Messages
- 11,659
Stefan bringing out the big guns today. Looking good!A little catch-up.
Borsalino nutria dattero
View attachment 211554
Borsalino Gorasgu
View attachment 211555
Knox Twenty
View attachment 211556
Stefan bringing out the big guns today. Looking good!A little catch-up.
Borsalino nutria dattero
View attachment 211554
Borsalino Gorasgu
View attachment 211555
Knox Twenty
View attachment 211556
Definitely a good thing you were wearing a helmet. I don’t get these guys I see on the Highway going 80mph with no helmet.
I may occasionally run around the corner to the store on little side streets without one, but on the highway is insanity.
Wow Steve... glad that helmet did its job and you came out of that ok. Incredible.This weekend I'm breaking in a brand new Stetson Sutley, I really like this one.
It's perched atop the helmet I was wearing when I had my heart attack last October when a blob of crud broke loose and totally plugged up an aorta.
Gentlemen, if you suddenly feel like you are nothing BUT a rib cage and a giant hand is trying to squeeze it flat do NOT get on your motorcycle and try and tough it out as you won't get there.
These pictures don't show just how trashed the helmet was after I plowed through a corn field at speed. It ripped off all of the vents and the face shield is cracked right where my right eye was. These Arai helmets are okay with me. One little batch of color missing from the Vanson leathers and nary a scratch on me.
Bike took a bit of a beating and smelled like a pop corn maker once I got it back from the towing company but it was put back into service quickly enough.
View attachment 211580 View attachment 211581
Definitely a good thing you were wearing a helmet. I don’t get these guys I see on the Highway going 80mph with no helmet.
I may occasionally run around the corner to the store on little side streets without one, but on the highway is insanity.
Quite beautiful Daniele.I opened the trilby box and enjoyed making a choice on which ones to wear on these sunny days
View attachment 211619
Borsalino Amiata size 6 1/2 so a 7 1/2 US that confirming the Borsalino fame: it's tight enough for my head, but wearable
View attachment 211620
I kept this hat in the collection for its incredible color which is common in the grays of Borsalino, but here, with long-haired felt, it becomes fantastic
View attachment 211621
It is clearly a product of the seventies with a care in the finishes and quality of the felt, unthinkable today
View attachment 211622
Maybe I will put some other trilby or short-brim on my head, I have gathered others to be sold, even if for some I am sorry having very rare characteristics
View attachment 211623
Happy weekend all and thanks for your likes on Panizza Ediston!
Compliments for your wonderful hats!!!
Yes, it's a horsehair band that came on a beat up Mallory I got a couple of years ago. The 3X came sans band so this is what I've been using whenever I wear it.Nice one Michael. Is that a Horse Hair band ?
Nice collection. I like the Knox with that camel coat.A little catch-up.
Borsalino nutria dattero
View attachment 211554
Borsalino Gorasgu
View attachment 211555
Knox Twenty
View attachment 211556
The most unfortunate thing is no matter how experienced a rider you are today the other drivers on the road take it away from you. A friend of ours who is a VERY experienced and safe rider of nearly 50 Years... a cross country rider... was returning from the convenience store to his camp ground at bike week. Got smashed by a car that blew a stop sign and broke almost every bone in his body. He was extremely lucky to survive and recover... and he decided his riding days were behind him.I don’t understand people who ride motorcycles. It’s all about the amount of risk you’re comfortable with. No matter how good of a rider you are or how defensively you ride, you are exposed and have minimal protection and you can’t remove the risks. I’ve seen far too many collisions, and I’ve seen far too much death to ride anymore. I think people should be allowed to assume whatever personal risks they are comfortable with without government regulations, but my personal threshold is somewhere below motorcycles. I do miss riding.
Great deep green MichaelStarted out the day in the Biltmore Golden Pheasant
IMG_1181 crop by Michael A2012, on Flickr
IMG_1205 crop by Michael A2012, on Flickr
2-8-2020 Today's Clothes by Michael A2012, on Flickr
I've moved on to an old Champ since photos were taken and might move my way through a couple more today.
Have a good Saturday,
Michael
Thanks Joe. It does a pretty good job on green. Ha ha.Great deep green Michael
WOW.....MI’s and motorcycles, bout as scary a mix as can be!!This weekend I'm breaking in a brand new Stetson Sutley, I really like this one.
It's perched atop the helmet I was wearing when I had my heart attack last October when a blob of crud broke loose and totally plugged up an aorta.
Gentlemen, if you suddenly feel like you are nothing BUT a rib cage and a giant hand is trying to squeeze it flat do NOT get on your motorcycle and try and tough it out as you won't get there.
These pictures don't show just how trashed the helmet was after I plowed through a corn field at speed. It ripped off all of the vents and the face shield is cracked right where my right eye was. These Arai helmets are okay with me. One little batch of color missing from the Vanson leathers and nary a scratch on me.
Bike took a bit of a beating and smelled like a pop corn maker once I got it back from the towing company but it was put back into service quickly enough.
View attachment 211580 View attachment 211581
+1 — except, I still ride, or will, as soon as I can find the deal I’m looking for in a Yamaha Stratoliner 1900ccI don’t understand people who ride motorcycles. It’s all about the amount of risk you’re comfortable with. No matter how good of a rider you are or how defensively you ride, you are exposed and have minimal protection and you can’t remove the risks. I’ve seen far too many collisions, and I’ve seen far too much death to ride anymore. I think people should be allowed to assume whatever personal risks they are comfortable with without government regulations, but my personal threshold is somewhere below motorcycles. I do miss riding.
Way cool pic, Tim!Whippet today helping me keep up running with the grandkids on the power wheels around the block. Lincoln is sporting a Borsalino.
View attachment 211693
View attachment 211694
I don’t understand people who ride motorcycles. It’s all about the amount of risk you’re comfortable with. No matter how good of a rider you are or how defensively you ride, you are exposed and have minimal protection and you can’t remove the risks. I’ve seen far too many collisions, and I’ve seen far too much death to ride anymore. I think people should be allowed to assume whatever personal risks they are comfortable with without government regulations, but my personal threshold is somewhere below motorcycles. I do miss riding.
Excellent. That’s how you do it!Whippet today helping me keep up running with the grandkids on the power wheels around the block. Lincoln is sporting a Borsalino.
View attachment 211693
View attachment 211694
Very nice job RandallView attachment 211703 View attachment 211702
Here’s my Stetson Homburg-fedora conversion . Finished it yesterday. I liked it as a homburg, but I amassed three black homburgs recently (two Borsalinos) that looked exactly alike. One of them had to change. The Stetson was the better candidate.
I removed and reused the brim binding so it wouldn’t pucker underneath in the conversion process.
Hand sewing small stitches ain’t fun, but it turned out nice. Where the binding only covered an 1/8 “ on top and over a 1/2 on bottom, now it covers a 1/4” on both sides. I love how it turned out! It may now even compete in my top five picks.