Clothing strangled

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Viper5

Regular
Well thought why the eck go get kitted out for all weather's.

So brought a Trek Jersey and Bib set. Great for summer.

So tried it on omg....its a large and I'm not big. A little tum but soon to go. This was sooooi tight. Opted for re order XL.

Does this stuff come up small?
 

fossyant

Ride It Like You Stole It!
Location
South Manchester
Some of it is. I made the mistake of not realising Northwave were Italian. My bibs are very tight - OK for summer though.
 

Ben Reeve

Well-Known Member
Size guides on the websites tend to be pretty good, but I do find with tights definitely I go Xl, when I would only normally take a L in shorts.

I used to struggle with them digging into my shoulders where the legs would pull them down.
 

Cold

Guest
I bought a Dhb long sleeved top recently I went for a large as I'm a medium in normal clothes, could barely get the thing fastened so sent it back and got xl it turned up and I still struggled to get it fastened but the arms were longer.
It gets a bit confusing in what size to get.
 

sidevalve

Über Member
Sizes mean very little - every manufacturer has their own ideas. That applies especially to clothes from the east - china taiwan etc the asian frame tends to be a bit smaller [not the bike]
 

Tim Hall

Guest
Location
Crawley
Sizes mean very little - every manufacturer has their own ideas. That applies especially to clothes from the east - china taiwan etc the asian frame tends to be a bit smaller [not the bike]
I've had a great idea: Clothes could be marked with numbers rather than letters. The numbers would correspond to a stated dimension, such as chest size, waist size, leg length etc. Do you think it will catch on?
 

byegad

Legendary Member
Location
NE England
I wear XL tops from a multitude of 'normal' clothing manufacturers. For cycling related clothing my tops have L. XL, XXL or even XXXL sizes sewn in by the manufacturers. Several expensive mistakes have taught me to try before I buy from cycle clothing outlets.
 

sidevalve

Über Member
I've had a great idea: Clothes could be marked with numbers rather than letters. The numbers would correspond to a stated dimension, such as chest size, waist size, leg length etc. Do you think it will catch on?
Pure genius - but such radical ideas will never work - far too simple
 

tmif

Active Member
Location
Plymouth
In my (limited) experience all cycling clothes are made by people with faulty tape measures.

I usually get 1 or 2 sizes bigger than usual when buying cycling stuff and it's still pretty tight.
 
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