Friday, April 25, 2025

Remembering when to fill up with gas

 I haven't been riding my old Royal Enfield Bullet much lately. Life always seems to find a way to interfere with good intentions. 

So, Sunday, I decided to ride to church, another thing I don't do often enough. 

Since I don't ride every day now that I'm retired, and no longer commute to work, getting ready for the ride involved all the checks: drain the dry sump, pump up the tire pressure, clean the spark plug, check the valves for compression, and check the gas. 

The gas! How much do I have? 

There's no gas gauge, of course, so I keep track by making a note of the odometer reading at the last fill-up. But where to keep this note so I'd find it? 

Last time filled up I decided to tape the note to my helmet. I'd be sure to see it there. 

Except, this Sunday, I put the helmet on, nice and tight, without reading the note. I suppose I could have reached up and pulled it off to read it, but, truth is, I forgot about it entirely.

The Bullet started on the second kick. Good old Bullet! And so I rode off, my mileage note flapping unnoticed on the top of my helmet.

After not riding for awhile I was surprised how good it felt. Why don't I do this more often?

Church went fine, and so did the ride home. Putting away my helmet I encountered the note. It was still there, just a bit crinkled from the airflow around the helmet.

I straightened it out and taped it back onto the helmet.

What do you think? Will I remember it next time?

Friday, April 18, 2025

More racy Royal Enfield artwork from 1930

Colorized 1930 image of rider and girlfriend.
This was the best I could do to enhance a 95-year-old magazine clipping.

 Found: a rare illustration of a roaring 1930 Royal Enfield motorcycle and its speed-obsessed rider and his pretty girlfriend. 

Last week I wrote how I had noticed the artwork in the official scrapbooks of the historic Royal Enfield factory in Redditch, UK. A black-and-white magazine photo of it and its caption were pasted into one scrapbook. 

I'd never seen this image before, anywhere. 

According to the caption, the image was available to Royal Enfield dealers as a poster, to be displayed in their windows. It would have advertised the 1930 Royal Enfield motorcycles inside the dealership. 

The caption also said that the posters were in color (the magazine clipping, of course was printed only in black and white). 

I took the liberty of using an artificial intelligence program to colorize the image in the clipping. After all, the original had been in color, so this wasn't cheating.

Color made it look even better, although the dot-pattern "screen" used by the magazine reduced detail.

To find out more about the artwork I emailed Bob Murdoch, archivist at the Royal Enfield Owners Club UK, which possesses the scrapbooks. Bob had laboriously photographed the many pages of the scrapbooks, and had shared these with me.

Had he ever noticed this image?

After all, this was one clipping on one page among hundreds of pages. To my surprise, he replied the next day:

"I do recognize this picture from the historic artwork folder of the Archives and have attached our copy, which you'll note is not a color painting, but a newsprint-prepared black and white print."

Screened drawing of couple on motorcycle.
Despite the dot pattern you can see the detail. (REOC Archive)

So the club had the image, a much better copy than the magazine clipping in the scrapbook! Unfortunately, it still had the dot pattern, and was still black and white.

But Bob was able to tell me a lot (and there was another surprise coming).

"Most of Royal Enfield's publicity images were created by line-tracing photographs with ink on a semi-transparent film laid on top of the photo. These were then enhanced with color, shade and movement lines, which is a very effective method for capturing correct detail and perspective.

"So, the painting mentioned would have been a color 'wash' of such a tracing. I was a technical illustrator in the aerospace industry for several years, so I recognize the method used. 

"Among the factory photographs there are quite a few posed riders on bikes, clearly for this purpose. My favorite one which comes to mind is the 1958 Crusader and rider balanced on a brick at a sporty angle, which was pen-and-washed for the 1958 advert/brochure."

Did the Archive have an original photo of a couple posing for the illustration that interested me?

"Unfortunately, no such photo survives of our adventurous couple in question, but one other aspect (from a different angle) was traced and enhanced from the same photoshoot. You'll see from the front number (license) plate that this is a Model JL of 1930."

Wait, there is another version of the speeding Royal Enfield, rider and pretty girl?

Different version of same scene.
A different pose for the rider and best of all, no dot pattern.

Yes, and Bob attached a scan of that, too. It's still black and white, but it has NO screen pattern, meaning it's as fresh as the copy-artist made it.

I like it even better. Note how much more lifelike and realistic the rider looks in this version. I would bet that his friends could identify the fellow who posed for it.

Interestingly, this version of the image IS signed by an artist; you can see "H. Wilson" clearly in the lower right corner.

Artist put name in corner: H. Wilson.
This time the artwork is signed: H. Wilson.

Unlike the first version, with the rider crouching low, I did find this second version on the Internet.

It appears, without explanation, in the humor section of Motorcycle Timeline, labelled "Joy of the Road." It is screened there, so it's likely it was published someplace in its day.

Readers, had you seen it before?

Couple rides motorcycle in line drawing.
Found by Motorcycle Timeline, this version is labelled "The Joy of the Road."

Friday, April 11, 2025

Racy Royal Enfield poster sold speed

 Packed with potential emotion, motorcycles are often depicted at the intersection of Art and Marketing. And there is nothing more moving than artistic depictions of speed. 

Except for one thing: just add the girl. 

"...but wait, the solitary knight of the prewar days has been joined by a hot girlfriend, as our hero hurtles down the road to prove he is no Model T owner," writes Paul d'Orleans in his essay "Selling Speed" on The Vintagent blog. 

His example is R.C. Reyrolles' 1946 painting of a prototype HRD-Vincent Series B Rapide. 

The painting shows the Vincent nearly airborne with speed, its manly rider tightly embraced by a terrified girl. Her skirt is blown back on her shapely and oh-so-endangered thigh. 

It's my favorite motorcycling image, although not one I'd personally seek to emulate.

Woman clings to man riding motorcycle.
1946 R.C. Reyrolles painting of HRD-Vincent and riders.

But wait!

I've found a rare Royal Enfield version of the same scene.

I noticed this artistic treasure in the Royal Enfield factory scrapbook of 1930 press clippings, made digitally available by Bob Murdoch, archivist of the Royal Enfield Owners Club (UK).

The clipping is a magazine report on advertising window display posters made available to Royal Enfield dealers in 1930.

With flying motorcycle, crouching rider, and pretty passenger, it could have served as the draft version for Reyrolle's Vincent painting of 1946.

Britain's Cycle Trader magazine showed two of the new Royal Enfield posters, including this one, in its edition of, Nov. 4, 1930.

Magazine clipping in scrapbook.
Magazine clipping in Royal Enfield factory scrapbook shows the poster.

The caption: "MORE 1930 POSTERS -- Two of the striking window bills that are available for Royal Enfield dealers. Both are produced in attractive colors. Equally powerful posters relating to pedal cycles are also issued, along with other well designed display matter."

Of course the Cycle Trader clipping is in black and white, so we don't know what "attractive colors" graced the original window bills.

For purposes of this blog item I let the Palette.fm program make its best guess. The result is not unpleasing.

Colorized version of magazine clipping
A version of the black and white clipping with color added by AI.

But who was the artist? I see no sign of an artist's name on the poster. What a shame.

And who was that girl?

The Royal Enfield rider and his girlfriend are less daring than the Vincent couple. Our girl doesn't wrap her arms around her man, or hide her face in terror.

But you have to give the Royal Enfield girl points for the scarf, or ribbon, flowing care free from her hat. And she is showing plenty of leg, enhanced exactly as in the Reyrolles painting by holding her foot just so.

I guessed, probably incorrectly, that the Royal Enfield in the painting is the Model JF31. That's the  488cc overhead-valve, four-valve single that made such a splash at the Olympia Motorcycle Show the same year the window poster came out.

The forward-sloping motor, long pushrod tunnels, and fat fishtail silencer look right; but all these features would have been shared with some two-valve Royal Enfields of that year.

What made me think of the 488cc four-valver is that it would have been the fastest of the Royal Enfield line, and thus most worthy of a painting.

But, then, maybe not. 

Woman in white poses on Royal Enfield.
A woman in white in a 1930 Royal Enfield photograph.

In the Hitchcocks Motorcycles archive of Royal Enfield factory images is a young woman in white, sitting on "a 346cc Royal Enfield Model CO. This RE model was for the 1931 season and features OHV and a total loss oil pump mounted externally on the timing cover."

Could this be the woman and motorcycle in the painting?

Take a look at another photo, this one from Royal Enfield's Instagram account. It's the same motorcycle, RX6637, and she is wearing the same outfit. And doesn't she look prettier in profile?

Girl in white on Royal Enfield motorcycle.
Another view of the same girl on the same Royal Enfield.

I found one more set of 1930 photos showing a similar looking girl, but in a different outfit with a different Royal Enfield.

These two photos appeared in Peter Miller's book "Royal Enfield, The Early History." One shows her pushing the motorcycle through a gate, and the other has her perched fetchingly on another gate. (Check "gate, symbol, female, Freudian.")

Woman pushes motorcycle through gate.
A Royal Enfield, but not the motorcycle in the painting.

The caption in Peter Miller's book tells us this:

"Works promotional photographs of the 488cc OHV Standard Two-port Model EL. The implication is that it is the lady who is the rider and it is she who has taken her boyfriend for a ride, although hardly dressed for riding."

Couple talks next to gate, motorcycle.
Different dress, but is she the girl in the painting?

I will go out on a limb and say that whoever parked that motorcycle did a poor job of it. Is she supposed to pick it up?

No, the motorcycle is posed that way for art's sake. It would be a less eye-catching photograph if the motorcycle were solidly on its stand.

For one thing, an upright motorcycle would have blocked the view of her legs, wouldn't it?

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