Kim’s Raso features the tri-composite weave with a red thread running through the carbon – a color that shifts from subtle to vivid depending on the light. Indoors, under fluorescent, you’d barely know it was there. Outside, in the Arizona sun, it pops. She opted for pinstriping at the junctions where the tri-composite meets the forged carbon lugs, a design decision born of a concern that the two finishes, unpainted, might look mismatched. The Sarto logo, meanwhile, is rendered as an outline rather than a solid fill, letting the fabric texture of the carbon breathe through. “I’m very happy with how it turned out,” says Kim, who is, by her own admission, the quieter half of this duo – but no less certain about what she wants.
Bill’s Raso is another thing entirely. He chose a new ribbed tri-composite weave he’d spotted on Sarto’s Instagram in December – a pattern so fresh that, when he asked Adam whether Sarto had ever combined it with forged carbon forks, the answer was no. Nobody had. “I’m like, you know what, I have a good eye for this stuff. I think we’re just going to go for it.” What followed were a few restless nights, the particular anxiety of a man who has committed serious money to a combination that exists only in his imagination. Would the two carbon textures clash? Would it look, as he so delicately puts it, like something went wrong? He decided he could live with the worst case. It was still going to be a Sarto.
The reveal happened earlier today, just outside the room they’re chatting to me from at Regroup, with both bikes on pedestals. Adam, wisely, had refused to send photos during the three-day drive from Chicago. He wanted the moment to land in person. Bill saw Kim’s first and momentarily mistook it for his own – the two bikes, both dark, both raw carbon, read as siblings until you got close. Then he turned to his. “Oh, my goodness. This looks amazing.” The ribbed weave and forged carbon, it turned out, were made for each other. No pinstriping needed. The textures flow, different but harmonious, like two verses of the same song.
Neither bike had been ridden at the time of our conversation – that pleasure was days away, pending sessions with Barry Anderson, Regroup’s Director of Fit and Biomechanics, who would dial in the final details. Bill, who has two cracked vertebrae from separate accidents earlier in life, had always just dealt with the resulting back pain on the bike. A custom geometry and a proper fit promised something new: a position that didn’t ask him to simply endure. Kim’s fit had already surfaced a revelation of its own. On a previous visit, Barry’s pressure mapping had identified that her Fizik 3D-printed saddle – a custom piece from their Chicago shop – was way off. The culprit? A defective scanner that couldn’t read a lighter rider accurately. Barry caught what the technology missed, and a replacement saddle was on its way. “Having somebody that knowledgeable and direct, focused on your needs – it’s personalized,” says Kim. “He’s listening to you.”