1950 – 1985
The Golden Era of Italian Steel
A journey through the most extraordinary period in bicycle craftsmanship — when Italian artisans forged machines of such beauty and precision they changed the course of cycling history.
Chapter One
A Craft Born in the Postwar Era
In the rubble of postwar Italy, something remarkable happened. As the nation rebuilt itself, a generation of craftsmen turned their extraordinary mechanical skill to an unlikely medium: the bicycle. In the workshops of Milan, Turin, and the small towns of Lombardy, master framebuilders began creating machines that were as much art as engineering.
The materials were humble — steel tubing, brass filler rod, lugs cast in bronze — but in the hands of men like Ernesto Colnago, Ugo De Rosa, and Cino Cinelli, these became the raw ingredients of masterpieces. Each frame was brazed by hand, the lugs carved and decorated with a jeweler’s patience.
What distinguished Italian steel was not merely technical excellence but a philosophy: that a bicycle should be beautiful first, and fast second — for in beauty lay the inspiration to push harder, climb higher, and suffer more willingly up the endless mountain passes of the peninsula.
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