#MUSA

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Rivendell’s MUSA Pants and Shorts Updated for 2025

Radar

Rivendell’s MUSA Pants and Shorts Updated for 2025

Rivendell‘s MUSA, or made in the USA, line got a refresh this year with new fabric for its pants and shorts. This Berry Military fabric is *PFAS free (all DWR is PFAS), so no harmful chemicals will run off in your wash. These are made locally, about 19 miles from Rivendell’s warehouse. For the pants, from the knees up, they’re cut like Dickies because that’s what Will likes to ride in normally. Below the knees, they’re tapered to avoid chainring interference. The shorts also got a PFAS-free fabric treatment.

*Starting as soon as Rivendell realized all of this, and affecting all MUSA clothing made for the 2025 season and onward, no more PFAS. The big fabric supplier, Milliken, has been, as they put it, “PFAS-free since ’23.”

It’s still not as green as organic cotton or hemp or linen, but this is a step toward that, and at least a pair of our MUSA bottoms will likely last 10+ years. That’s something.

See more on the new MUSA pants and shorts Rivendell.

Wolf Tooth Components and Otso Cycles Factory Visit

Reportage

Wolf Tooth Components and Otso Cycles Factory Visit

Wolf Tooth Components and Otso Cycles have been making innovative bicycles and parts for over a decade. Starting in 2013 with aftermarket chainrings and cogs for nascent 1x drivetrains, their offerings have grown considerably to include an expanded catalog of machined aluminum parts, complex tools, dropper posts, and a full-blown sibling bike brand, Otso Cycles. Josh spent a day at Wolf Tooth‘s Minneapolis HQ earlier this year and reports on what he learned about the brand’s history and where they’re headed…

Thornhill Bike Launches With the Kitloader 70 Mountain Bike Gear Bag

Radar

Thornhill Bike Launches With the Kitloader 70 Mountain Bike Gear Bag

Thornhill Bike is launching with a presale of the Kitloader 70, a semi-rigid, collapsible mountain bike gear bag made with adjustable dividers and premium materials in Asheville, North Carolina. Read on for a closer look at all of the Kitloader 70’s organizational details and to learn more about founder James Leath’s obsessive quest to craft products that will keep his (and your) rides more dialed.