(2/2/2012)
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MILWAUKEE
- The Harley-Davidson® Seventy-Two™ motorcycle is a metal flake dream
machine, a Sportster® on a trip back to the days when the cool kids rode
a Sting-Ray and the big boys parked choppers in a row on the curb.
Those motorcycles were long and lean; candy-apple color and gleaming
chrome shimmering in hazy summer sunlight. From its Hard Candy Big Red
Flake paint and ape bars to its narrow whitewall tires, the Seventy-Two
is a respectful nod to that era, and to the influence of the custom
culture that still percolates today along Whittier Boulevard, the
legendary cruising street in East Los Angeles also known as Route 72. A
new generation of custom builder is tapping into that era and making a
fresh statement, not just in California but in garages across the
country, even around the world.
“In creating the Seventy-Two, we
were also inspired by the vibe of the early chopper era,” says Frank
Savage, Harley-Davidson Manager of Industrial Design. “Those bikes were
colorful and chromed, but also narrow and stripped down to the
essentials. You look at period examples and they are almost as simple as
a bicycle. It’s a custom style that’s very particular to America and
that California scene.”
Want more? Visit www.libertyharley.com
(2/2/2012)
-
MILWAUKEE
- Pare down a Harley-Davidson® Softail® motorcycle to its essential
elements and you have the Slim. From its trimmed front fender to its
narrow rear end, Slim is a no-nonsense, back-to-basics motorcycle. Call
it stripped. Call it old school. Call it lean and mean. What’s left is
the elemental Softail profile and iconic Harley-Davidson® style that
recalls classic custom bobbers of the 1950s.
“It’s time to make
the engine the focal point of the motorcycle,” says Harley-Davidson
Senior Designer Casey Ketterhagen, “so we put a Softail on a diet to get
the proportions back in check. Scale down the rear with a narrow tire
and chopped fender and the heart of the bike, the motor, once again
becomes the focus. We left a gap between the nose of the seat and tank
so the rider can see the top of the motor. I like to be able to look
down and see what’s moving me.”
Want more? Visit www.libertyharley.com
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