– The mountain bike came along and that was a bit of a revolution- Paco recalls. It came from the United States with a more modern and more daring air than traditional road cycling, and those who rode mountain bikes also wanted to distinguish themselves aesthetically. The bib shorts were supposed to be different, with lots of colours…
– The mountain bike brands designed bib shorts that were like gerrikos, a kind of wide, horrible protective belts- says María Jesús.
– It was a bit of a circus. The four guys who started mountain biking were dressed in carnival costumes- smiles Paco. They were looking for a different aesthetic and we took that into account, we started to add some colours…
– With mountain biking we get our heads in a twist– María Jesús laughs.
-… but I have always been very interested in the market, in knowing the mentality of the buyers, and I saw that I could be the most groundbreaking and the most daring in fashion, but that it didn’t make sense because nobody would buy those flashy garments. When it came down to it, those extravagant culottes sold five and we sold fifty. We made designs that didn’t expire from one year to the next, they lasted. And there was another very important reason: aesthetics were not enough. We provided a quality that others couldn’t achieve. Every season we evolved in technical fabrics, whether goretex or windstopper, we improved the pattern, we made comfortable, light, reliable garments.
– We design our fashion collections, but I insist: in cycling clothing, aesthetics alone is not enough- says María Jesús. We have to improve aesthetics and technical quality every year. And that’s what we continue to do today.