Home > Clothing-Gear-Tools

New Ideas To Help Your Bike Commute From Lumo, Morpher, Ellaspede & More

10 Comments
Support us! Bikerumor may earn a small commission from affiliate links in this article. Learn More

Lumo-Cycling-Apparel

The market of cycle commuters is not huge, and not as sexy as road or mountain bike racing. Typically underserved, Kickstarter has offered a way for a lot of ideas for commuting cyclists to come to life, offering exposure and funding for these ideas, as well as a quick test of the market reaction to the idea. With these three parts of going-to-market rolled into one service, its a nice easy way to get ideas out there. The service requires that inventors make a design and prototype before posting on the site, which can already help weed out the good from the bad. It is also a lot easier to pitch an idea with pictures and physical samples to show. For instance, did you know the jacket above features LED lighting so the rider can be seen better?

Check out the ideas for clothing, gear storage, foldable helmets and more after the jump…

Lumo-Features

Lumo

Lumo is building wearable technology, with a jacket and a bag that increases your visibility on the road with integrated LED lighting. With design inspiration from classic British outerwear, they have combined this design style with wearable technology features to help keep cyclists safe. According to Lumo, the built in LED lights make you more visible than a fluorescent jacket.

Cool technology for sure, but they wanted to make sure that it didn’t look ridiculous when not in use, or while off the bike. To start, the LED lights are not visible when shut off, and they decided to use fabrics that look more like designers clothes, and less like a space suit.

They are also making several other products with the integrated lighting. Right now, they are only on Kickstarter, and have a very robust campaign with a lot of options to join their quest for funding.

Lumo on Kickstarter

Morpher Helmet

Similar to Kickstarter, Morpher got its start on Indiegogo. The $140 helmet folds & unfolds quickly and simply so it’s easy to carry around. Morpher says it has been designed to surpass all relevant safety standards, and the design is patented worldwide. All components of the helmet are completely recyclable, and one of the neater side effects of a folding helmet is that it could also be easily sold in the vending machines popping up outside of shops to help commuters with tubes and small tools.

Morpher says they are the world’s first fold-flat helmet. The reason for this helmet is a mission to get commuting cyclists to wear helmets more often, by making it easier for them to do so. The inventor, Jeffrey Woolf was involved in an accident where a helmet saved his life, and he though if he could create a helmet that could fold flat, it might save lives. His campaign is about encouraging helmet use by making them simpler to carry around when one isn’t actually on a bicycle.

www.morpherhelmet.com

Ellaspede

Ellaspede Helmet and Gear Hanger

Ellaspede has just launched a Kickstarter campaign for the Helmet and Gear Hanger, a device to keep gear like helmets, jackets, keys and gloves organized. Keeping your gear organized makes it easier to ride to work, so you don’t need to track down an errant jacket while you are running late.

www.ellaspede.com

B-Link Bicycle Safety System

The B-Link system is a combination of a front and rear light, and an app that integrates with them. Consisting of powerful LED lights, it makes you visible, has a blinker system, can send notifications to your loved ones when you have arrived at your destination and can let others know if you have been involved in an accident. Most interesting is that it can link your turn-by-turn directions to the lights, and automatically signal your turns for you.

B-Link on Kickstarter

 

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

10 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Rider X
Rider X
9 years ago

I hate to be that person… but what are people thinking?

– Dark clothing for commuting… making you even more stylishly during an accident.
– A complicated light that will surely be fraught with implementation errors
– Deviate from your allotted route (like that never happens) and send confusing signals to cars!
– Put your smart phone out of the way in the rain, and a errant pothole notifies your spouse that you are incapacitated after an accident.
– It combines existing features that currently work (blinky lights and smart phone apps that do location based notifications) and combines them into a single product that will probably perform both tasks more poorly!

About the only idea that seems decent (if it works as advertised) is the foldable helmet. I am not personally interested but can see others who may be.

Disclaimer – I used to be a volunteer writer for a bicycling as transportation publication.

Heffe
Heffe
9 years ago

Is that guy w the jacket Justin Beiber?

LateSleeper
LateSleeper
9 years ago

Are you looking at his hair? Perhaps his electric jacket is malfunctioning.

keville
9 years ago

I thought his rising column of hair was due to that Simulated Cooling Effect, kind of like in Back To The Future 2 with the self-drying jacket.

david
david
9 years ago

THANK YOU! RIDER X
I wasn’t going to post anything, but since you are “that guy” i can.
I totally agree. the first thing I thought was that black is the worst color. It isn’t as bad as the “share the road ” jersey that was black with a yellow line so you look just like the road.

Has anyone looked at Duluth Trading Company shirts and jackets? They have all the vents, long tails, gussets in the arms for movement. And they are not hipster fashion, they are clothes.

AlanM
AlanM
9 years ago

The commuter market is underserved? I’d say there is a pretty good selection of products out there.

Rider X
Rider X
9 years ago

@AlanM – Underserved for distance commuting, yes!

“Road” kit often has poor durability and poor visibility (dark colours are fine in a peloton, but suck as a solo rider). Visible commuter jackets are usually bulky, frumpy, flap in the wind and don’t breath well (they are intended for 5-10 km commutes).

It is hard to find a highly visible, tight cut riding jacket for the rain that will stand up to relentless daily abuse. So far the GORE path jacket is the only one that has ticked all the boxes. I just put up with the looser cut.

Rider X
Rider X
9 years ago

Since I am on a role…

Lumo Jackets

What the #%@$ does “simulates a cooling effect” even mean? Either it provides a cooling effect or it does not! (Do or do not… there is no try)

That’s some fine marketing double speak you have going on there.

Lou
Lou
9 years ago

I don’t think the target market is the hardcore daily commuter, rather it’s probably the casual city cyclist who would normally have something on that is totally inappropriate for low light cycling. If the jacket is stylish enough off the bike, that person that would normally not wear something reflective or visible, might grab this before they head out.

Miriam
9 years ago

I talked to Lucy Brown, co-founder of LUMO, about where the inspiration came from and what hidden features LUMO has to offer: http://www.digital-commute.com/lumo-makes-city-cyclists-safe-bike-stylish/

Subscribe Now

Sign up to receive BikeRumor content direct to your inbox.

Subscribe Now

Sign up to receive BikeRumor content direct to your inbox.