Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Vrooom vroooooooooom

After the public museum I went down to the Harley Davidson museum. Milwaukee is the hometown of this iconic brand, and they have a huge exhibit with lots of bikes, but also tons of advertising posters and all sorts of pop-cultural stuff surrounding the bikes themselves. There's mucho history here, folks; if it had been just some motorcycles on display I would never have bothered.

All pics here.

Can you say iconic?
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The first bike, made in 1903.
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Harley Davidson soon made bikes for the police...
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...and later they supplied the US Army during WW2.
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The ads went from stressing a safe, economic product to selling a dream.
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And a lifestyle. Girls in bikinis can sell anything.
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This monster, dubbed the King Kong, was made up of two bike frames and was loaded with assorted bling.
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Speaking of bling... this one is covered in rhinestones.
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Film gear from "Captain America".
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Peter Fonda's bike from that paranoid, whiny, piece of shit movie "Easy rider".
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The company even dabbled in the scooter business for some years.
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They almost went belly-up in the early 80s, but today they're as strong as ever.
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In a separate building, they had a temporary exhibit on the history of leather jackets. Originally work gear and soldier gear, after the war it became associated with biker gangs and other hoodlums. The jacket is now a fashion statement of course. I bought my first one in November and I love it to death.
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Ahnuld's outfit from Terminator.
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Hugh Laurie's outfit from House, MD.
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This bike & jacket belonged to Elvis. He bought the bike on an instalment plan a few months before he had his breakthrough.
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