2024 LIMITED
I fell seriously behind on any SS/FW bags this year, so 2024 is a year of just one special-finish drop. Ship within 2 weeks or so for a pre-Christmas delivery in the lower 48, all bags are mostly finished but I ran out of some important materials to complete the run for the 11/30 drop and will be getting everything complete as those things arrive. Costs differences this time around are all due to the quilting, +15 on flap and rando bags and +8 on frame panniers. Map pouches are made with the same trim and canvas but without any quilting, so same price as always.
Made with gold no 8 duck canvas, a color that’s highly reactive to light and fluctuates between a deep goldenrod or canary yellow to a fiery sunset orange, these bags have natural undyed center panels with freeform quilting, emerald green shock cord, brown straps, and black trim with off-white contrast stitching to. Think high-vis but keep it earthy and subdued, these are much more at home on a vintage build than proper blaze orange or fluro yellow. Most of the photos tend to make them seem more on the orange side, but that was just the light at that moment. There’s a close up tag photo that’s a good example of how much more yellow it looks under indoor blue light. Liner is aforementioned blaze orange, this time in recycled 400d instead of my standard 200d which has been out of stock for months sadly. You’re looking at duck canvas bags with purely aesthetic quilting though, you can deal with a few extra ounces from a stronger liner.
-The Weekender is my do-it-all longflap saddle or handlebar bag. New as of this drop: all Weekenders have corrugated plastic stiffiners for the back and bottom panels. Read about it here.
-The Weekender Mini is everything you love from the weekender, but with a much smaller footprint. Other than the size, the only difference is the two-row rack daisy chain from the larger Weekender is replaced by a long single daisy chain better suited for headtubes and seat tubes, since the volume of this bag shouldn’t need a rack support in most cases. Along with the two Voile straps standard to my flap bags, I include 6 foam spacers with this bag since I intend for it to be used on handlebars more often. Same back and bottom panel corrugated plastic sheet as the full Weekender.
6.5”x6.5”x10.5” main compartment, just under 8L before you start using the expandable space there, which can go from 6.5” tall to just under 10” tall. Side pockets make the whole thing about 15” wide and add just over another liter of storage.
-Modular Ramblonneurs are my take on the classic randonneur bag, with webbing that makes them compatible with all the same accessories as my flap and roll bags. Read all about them here. Shown in the photo is the short model, only flat side pockets this time around.
-The Frame Panniers are a two-pocket top tube bag, my first offering of this style. A captive cord/adjustor slips around your downtube to tension the bag and reduce sway, and a removable snap strap on the rear allows for this bag to be potentially used with other accessories that take up the inner triangle of a bicycle frame. A non-adjustable handle on the top makes this an easy carry off the bike, and each side has a small flat organizer pocket for ID, credit cards, wallet, pens, folded up papers, individual deli slices, floppy disks, and several other pre-approved items. Note, if you look closely in the photos you’ll see these mini flaps under the hook and cord at the front. These didn’t do anything except add weight and bulk in testing due to the boxy shape of the bag making them sit significantly back from any bike tube, so the bag I send you won’t have them.
If you’d like to expand the usability of Weekenders or Ramblonneurs even more, they are compatible with the Map Pouch, Floating Webbing Net (Weekenders only), Net Harness, and Fancy Pouch.
Duck Canvas bags can be fully waterproofed with my waterproofing wax.
I fell seriously behind on any SS/FW bags this year, so 2024 is a year of just one special-finish drop. Ship within 2 weeks or so for a pre-Christmas delivery in the lower 48, all bags are mostly finished but I ran out of some important materials to complete the run for the 11/30 drop and will be getting everything complete as those things arrive. Costs differences this time around are all due to the quilting, +15 on flap and rando bags and +8 on frame panniers. Map pouches are made with the same trim and canvas but without any quilting, so same price as always.
Made with gold no 8 duck canvas, a color that’s highly reactive to light and fluctuates between a deep goldenrod or canary yellow to a fiery sunset orange, these bags have natural undyed center panels with freeform quilting, emerald green shock cord, brown straps, and black trim with off-white contrast stitching to. Think high-vis but keep it earthy and subdued, these are much more at home on a vintage build than proper blaze orange or fluro yellow. Most of the photos tend to make them seem more on the orange side, but that was just the light at that moment. There’s a close up tag photo that’s a good example of how much more yellow it looks under indoor blue light. Liner is aforementioned blaze orange, this time in recycled 400d instead of my standard 200d which has been out of stock for months sadly. You’re looking at duck canvas bags with purely aesthetic quilting though, you can deal with a few extra ounces from a stronger liner.
-The Weekender is my do-it-all longflap saddle or handlebar bag. New as of this drop: all Weekenders have corrugated plastic stiffiners for the back and bottom panels. Read about it here.
-The Weekender Mini is everything you love from the weekender, but with a much smaller footprint. Other than the size, the only difference is the two-row rack daisy chain from the larger Weekender is replaced by a long single daisy chain better suited for headtubes and seat tubes, since the volume of this bag shouldn’t need a rack support in most cases. Along with the two Voile straps standard to my flap bags, I include 6 foam spacers with this bag since I intend for it to be used on handlebars more often. Same back and bottom panel corrugated plastic sheet as the full Weekender.
6.5”x6.5”x10.5” main compartment, just under 8L before you start using the expandable space there, which can go from 6.5” tall to just under 10” tall. Side pockets make the whole thing about 15” wide and add just over another liter of storage.
-Modular Ramblonneurs are my take on the classic randonneur bag, with webbing that makes them compatible with all the same accessories as my flap and roll bags. Read all about them here. Shown in the photo is the short model, only flat side pockets this time around.
-The Frame Panniers are a two-pocket top tube bag, my first offering of this style. A captive cord/adjustor slips around your downtube to tension the bag and reduce sway, and a removable snap strap on the rear allows for this bag to be potentially used with other accessories that take up the inner triangle of a bicycle frame. A non-adjustable handle on the top makes this an easy carry off the bike, and each side has a small flat organizer pocket for ID, credit cards, wallet, pens, folded up papers, individual deli slices, floppy disks, and several other pre-approved items. Note, if you look closely in the photos you’ll see these mini flaps under the hook and cord at the front. These didn’t do anything except add weight and bulk in testing due to the boxy shape of the bag making them sit significantly back from any bike tube, so the bag I send you won’t have them.
If you’d like to expand the usability of Weekenders or Ramblonneurs even more, they are compatible with the Map Pouch, Floating Webbing Net (Weekenders only), Net Harness, and Fancy Pouch.
Duck Canvas bags can be fully waterproofed with my waterproofing wax.
I fell seriously behind on any SS/FW bags this year, so 2024 is a year of just one special-finish drop. Ship within 2 weeks or so for a pre-Christmas delivery in the lower 48, all bags are mostly finished but I ran out of some important materials to complete the run for the 11/30 drop and will be getting everything complete as those things arrive. Costs differences this time around are all due to the quilting, +15 on flap and rando bags and +8 on frame panniers. Map pouches are made with the same trim and canvas but without any quilting, so same price as always.
Made with gold no 8 duck canvas, a color that’s highly reactive to light and fluctuates between a deep goldenrod or canary yellow to a fiery sunset orange, these bags have natural undyed center panels with freeform quilting, emerald green shock cord, brown straps, and black trim with off-white contrast stitching to. Think high-vis but keep it earthy and subdued, these are much more at home on a vintage build than proper blaze orange or fluro yellow. Most of the photos tend to make them seem more on the orange side, but that was just the light at that moment. There’s a close up tag photo that’s a good example of how much more yellow it looks under indoor blue light. Liner is aforementioned blaze orange, this time in recycled 400d instead of my standard 200d which has been out of stock for months sadly. You’re looking at duck canvas bags with purely aesthetic quilting though, you can deal with a few extra ounces from a stronger liner.
-The Weekender is my do-it-all longflap saddle or handlebar bag. New as of this drop: all Weekenders have corrugated plastic stiffiners for the back and bottom panels. Read about it here.
-The Weekender Mini is everything you love from the weekender, but with a much smaller footprint. Other than the size, the only difference is the two-row rack daisy chain from the larger Weekender is replaced by a long single daisy chain better suited for headtubes and seat tubes, since the volume of this bag shouldn’t need a rack support in most cases. Along with the two Voile straps standard to my flap bags, I include 6 foam spacers with this bag since I intend for it to be used on handlebars more often. Same back and bottom panel corrugated plastic sheet as the full Weekender.
6.5”x6.5”x10.5” main compartment, just under 8L before you start using the expandable space there, which can go from 6.5” tall to just under 10” tall. Side pockets make the whole thing about 15” wide and add just over another liter of storage.
-Modular Ramblonneurs are my take on the classic randonneur bag, with webbing that makes them compatible with all the same accessories as my flap and roll bags. Read all about them here. Shown in the photo is the short model, only flat side pockets this time around.
-The Frame Panniers are a two-pocket top tube bag, my first offering of this style. A captive cord/adjustor slips around your downtube to tension the bag and reduce sway, and a removable snap strap on the rear allows for this bag to be potentially used with other accessories that take up the inner triangle of a bicycle frame. A non-adjustable handle on the top makes this an easy carry off the bike, and each side has a small flat organizer pocket for ID, credit cards, wallet, pens, folded up papers, individual deli slices, floppy disks, and several other pre-approved items. Note, if you look closely in the photos you’ll see these mini flaps under the hook and cord at the front. These didn’t do anything except add weight and bulk in testing due to the boxy shape of the bag making them sit significantly back from any bike tube, so the bag I send you won’t have them.
If you’d like to expand the usability of Weekenders or Ramblonneurs even more, they are compatible with the Map Pouch, Floating Webbing Net (Weekenders only), Net Harness, and Fancy Pouch.
Duck Canvas bags can be fully waterproofed with my waterproofing wax.