You鈥檇 Be Surprised How Hard It Is to Draw a Bike from Memory

Ever tried to draw a bike from memory? It鈥檚 surprisingly hard. That鈥檚 what , a teacher of design at the University of Ferrara, discovered when he asked friends and family to sketch their favorite whips. People forgot critical parts like rear triangles and seatposts, creating totally un-roadworthy frankensteeds. But lots of the sketches were beautiful and inventive, and Gimini decided to turn them into digital renderings as part of a project he鈥檚 calling Velocipedia. Here are some of his favorites.
Photo: This one is from Leonardo, one of my students at the Universit脿 of Ferrara. You can trust me that Leonardo knows a bike has a chain and pedals!

Martino, who as a child injured his calf badly on a mountain bike without a chain guard, drew one of the most accurate sketches. I guess the trauma made him remember the bike quite vividly.

I really fell in love with this design from Fiorenza. I forgave her for forgetting that wheels are attached by the hub and not the tire (a frequent mistake), but I couldn鈥檛 resist the way the handlebar connects to the fork.

Massimo鈥檚 is the most functional, innovative design I rendered. It uses a bit more metal for the frame than the normal diamond shape, but it would actually ride pretty well.

This one is from my uncle. I think the last time he rode a bike was when he was a child, and that鈥檚 why his design has a little flag. Clearly this model could never steer, but I do like it very much.

A design from my cousin, who鈥檚 a doctor and biked regularly until a few years ago. I guess he鈥檚 just not the best observer: his design is possibly the oddest, with both a lateral frame and two-wheel drive.

I liked Giorgia鈥檚 drawing for its odd pedals, which look a bit like stirrups.

I got more than one design like this one, where both the front and back wheels were connected with forks.

From my friend Marco. He鈥檚 a graphic designer and visual artist. He drew his bike around an M (as in Marco, of course).

I sort of cheated on this one: I鈥檓 sure this person intended to represent the frame connecting the front hub to the rear one.