Design that rides.
Design that rides.


Date. 2020 ─ Now.
Ridestraddle.
Ridestraddle.
It all started with frustration.
It all started with frustration.
I kept buying biker t-shirts, but none of them truly convinced me. Either the design was meaningless, the message didn’t fit, or they just looked like something mass-produced with no soul. And one day, after adding yet another one to my cart, I asked myself:
I kept buying biker t-shirts, but none of them truly convinced me. Either the design was meaningless, the message didn’t fit, or they just looked like something mass-produced with no soul. And one day, after adding yet another one to my cart, I asked myself:
⎯Why don’t I design my own t-shirts?
⎯Why don’t I design my own t-shirts?
That’s how Ridestraddle was born. Not as a business. Not even as an ambitious idea. Just as the need to create something that truly represented what I feel when I ride.
That’s how Ridestraddle was born. Not as a business. Not even as an ambitious idea. Just as the need to create something that truly represented what I feel when I ride.
The first design was almost an experiment—just a t-shirt for myself. Then my friends, the ones I rode with every year on our trips, started asking me for more. Each annual gathering became the perfect excuse to design something new: t-shirts, patches, small details that connected us beyond the road.
The first design was almost an experiment—just a t-shirt for myself. Then my friends, the ones I rode with every year on our trips, started asking me for more. Each annual gathering became the perfect excuse to design something new: t-shirts, patches, small details that connected us beyond the road.
And that’s when I understood something: design isn’t just aesthetics—it’s identity.
And that’s when I understood something: design isn’t just aesthetics—it’s identity.
Every piece I create follows that philosophy. It’s not about adding another skull or a random engine. It’s about capturing that feeling of freedom, belonging, and rebellion. Designing clothes for those who understand that a motorcycle isn’t just a vehicle—it’s a statement of principles.
Every piece I create follows that philosophy. It’s not about adding another skull or a random engine. It’s about capturing that feeling of freedom, belonging, and rebellion. Designing clothes for those who understand that a motorcycle isn’t just a vehicle—it’s a statement of principles.
I don’t sell t-shirts. I design stories you can wear.
I don’t sell t-shirts. I design stories you can wear.
© 2025 Juanma Jiménez | Designed in Figma & developed in Framer.
13:30
© 2025 Juanma Jiménez | Designed in Figma & developed in Framer.
13:30
© 2025 Juanma Jiménez | Designed in Figma & developed in Framer.
13:30
© 2025 Juanma Jiménez | Designed in Figma & developed in Framer.
13:30