Bike Portrait: Jessica and her Globe Daily 2

Bike Portrait: Jessica and her Globe Daily in Brooklyn

After I photographed her friend Jess back in March, Jessica and I connected on Twitter and talked about doing a bike portrait, since she was just starting to ride to work and was about to buy a new bike. Since then I’ve become a fan of her blog where she documented her commuting adventures and we even sat on a panel together at the New Amsterdam Bicycle Show. We were finally able to get together recently for a quick shoot near her apartment in Park Slope. Jessica wasn’t sure what to wear and finally just settled on the outfit she rode to work in that day. I think it works great.

I thought Jessica’s bike story would resonate with people who might be thinking about starting to commute in this city, so I used her portrait and profile for my weekly “Why I Ride” feature on Streetsblog. Here’s the text of the profile:

Jessica is the fitness editor for Prevention magazine. She’s lived in New York for ten years, but has only been commuting from Brooklyn to Manhattan for the last couple of months. Not that she hasn’t been riding. She’s ticked up countless laps in Prospect Park on her road bike over the years, and even had a heavy old beater — a 1973 3-speed — that she’d take out occasionally. She was just never that comfortable riding in traffic.

Recently she was researching and pitching a story about the health benefits of daily physical activity and how much of the rest of the world gets more of it (through walking and biking) than do most Americans. It occurred to her that maybe she could try riding to work. At the advice of a friend, she opted not to dive right into street riding but to ease in bit by bit. This started as a series of weekend rides around Brooklyn. Right away Jessica was pleasantly surprised by how much the network of bike lanes had been expanded since the last time she rode in the streets. The fact that she could ride from her house to the Manhattan Bridge almost exclusively on marked lanes made the whole endeavor feel much safer. She also picked up a new, more commute-friendly 8-speed bike. Not too long after that, in the company of a seasoned commuting friend, Jessica made her first trip over the Manhattan Bridge to her Midtown East office.

Even then, she didn’t dive in. The first few times, she would ride to work, take the subway back, then ride home from work the following day. But as her experience grew, so did her confidence. On her blog, she has detailed some of her experiences, mistakes, and discoveries: watching out for potholes, not overloading your baskets, what to wear to the office, the importance of downshifting. To her surprise, she found that only a few weeks in, she was already giving advice and pointers on routes and navigating traffic to other new cyclists.

“It’s just such an easy way to get around,” she says. “And even if I don’t make it to the gym, I’m doing something good for myself.”

We also took a portrait on the stoop of her building, and her roommate Dhira came downstairs with her bike and got in on the action. Click through to see the rest of the photos.

Dhira with her Nishiki

Jessica's initial idea was for a photo on her stoop. She's lived in this building for 10 years

Roomies

 

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  • Nellie Blacksberg - hi just wanted to no your height and size of bike you ordered.
    small, Med, Large,
    thanks Nellie

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