The scooter set rides in style — and safety

Published 5:00 am Sunday, October 24, 2010

LOS ANGELES — The look of motorcycling is largely defined by leather — most of it in cringe-worthy designs that are long on protection and short on style, especially for women. Indeed, “motorcycle fashion” is something of an oxymoron. There are motorcycles, and there is fashion, but rarely do the twain meet.

Scooters? That’s another story. Rooted in European design, the small number of designers devoted to scooter wear do a far better job of equalizing form and function, merging crash-worthy materials into styles that allow riders to step off their rides and into a restaurant without looking like they’ve been in a race.

“If you’re on a scooter, how ridiculous is it to be wearing a racing-style leather jacket? If your bike only goes 35 miles per hour, you feel kind of like a fraud,” said April Whitney, editor of Scoot magazine in San Jose, Calif. “Scooters are a personality statement, but they also have to fit into riders’ lives.”

Those lives are typically urban and professional — lived by individuals who value the fun, fuel efficiency and style of two wheels minus the macho posture of a motorcycle. It’s no wonder scooters are especially popular with women, who are drawn to the bikes’ no-muss, no-fuss automatic transmissions and step-through, rather than swing-a-leg-over, designs that let them dress like sophisticates rather than gear heads. Whereas 12 percent of motorcyclists are female, 41 percent of scooterists are women, according to the Irvine-based Motorcycle Industry Council.

And women demand more from their gear.

“I wouldn’t be caught dead in anything on the market,” said Arlene Battishill, a scooterist who spent years riding without protective gear rather than wearing what was available on her commute to a corporate job in real estate.

Now the 50-year-old Angeleno has her own line, GoGo Gear, a collection of six jackets that includes all the abrasion-resistant fabrics and armor of traditional riding gear but still looks feminine. It was launched this spring, and is sold online and at scooter and motorcycles shops. Battishill says she was inspired by the classic lines of Coco Chanel. Sized like women’s clothing, in even numbers, GoGo Gear’s designs follow the silhouettes of trench coats and military jackets. They also place the brand name where it belongs — inside the coat, rather than emblazoned all over the exterior, which is the unfortunate norm for most two-wheeler gear. This fall, Battishill expanded her line with pants, using an unlikely come-hither moniker for Kevlar-reinforced apparel: “ultimate date-night” jeans.

Battishill anticipates sales of $250,000 this year (part of the $1.81 billion annual U.S. apparel market for scooters and motorcycles). But she just opened her doors and expects her business to grow — eventually. Sales are sluggish this year, as they are for both scooter makers and most mom-and-pop scooter apparel manufacturers.

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