The Best Casual Cycling Sunglasses: The Desire Selection

The Best Casual Cycling Sunglasses: The Desire Selection


Holy moly cyclists wear some ugly sunglasses. For every treasured Oakley Eyeframe or Briko Sprinter selling on eBay, there’s a whole heap of plastic rightly consigned to the landfill. Maybe it’s just because I’m too myopic to consider wearing any of these expensive bits of fluorescent plastic, but I can’t say the idea has ever really appealed.

Of course, it didn’t use to be this way. Cycling’s golden era is full of famous faces furnished with beautiful sunglasses. Gino Bartali and Fausto Coppi in wire-frame aviators or acetate Moscots. Or even better, the understated Dutchman Jan Janssen in his square numbers. Very nice indeed. It’s hard not to think that these guys are to today’s cycling stars what a bottle of Pelforth is to a can of Redbull.

Discover Rouleur's Desire Selection: Our guide to the best products in cycling

So, as someone possessing eyes that need complex lenses, a face that benefits from a bit of set dressing, plus an unhealthy interest in expensive eyewear, here’s a cycling-inspired list of the best casual sunglasses.

Ray-Ban Aviators

£131, Shop Ray-Ban


The last of the real greats. Bernard Hinault began his long career with a penchant for gold-rimmed aviators and ended up wearing a set of plastic Rudy Project wraparounds.

If you want to emulate the earlier of these two styles Ray Ban’s ubiquitous Classic Aviator glasses are hard to look past. Originally designed for U.S.pilots in 1937, their polarized versions provide optimum visual clarity along with 100% UV protection.

Alba Optics Ferro

£169, Shop Alba Optics 


Despite being made for active use, if the prospect of a set of aviators with glass lenses is too nervy, Alba Optics offers all of the style, but with a scratch-resistant polycarbonate Vzum lens.

More shock absorbent, this almost unbreakable material provides excellent resilience, while the frames capture the aesthetic of the golden era.

POC Require

From £69, Shop POC


Looking like you've nabbed them from an upmarket opticians, yet secretly possessing many of the traits you’d expect from a pair of cycling-specific sunglasses, Poc’s Require supply the best of both style and practicality. Available in a range of frame colours, from classic tortoiseshell through bright blue and yellow, there’s an equally wide range of lens options.

Each made by German lens specialist Carl Zeiss you can be sure of their optical quality, while rubber details on the nosepiece and bridge mean they unlikely to move no matter how much you sweat or the rain pours.

Persol Key West

£200, Shop Persol 

A pretty good fit for the shades worn by Jan Janssen, these models from Italian makers Persol are also very lovely in their own right. The browline frames Janssen actually sported were generally made by Provop, a French brand imitating American designs, or came from the firm American Opticals.

Given that you’re looking at a lot of money plus years of searching eBay to find either of those, we think these make a great stand-in. They’re also the shades worn by Nicolas Cage in the very good but very depressing film Leaving Las Vegas.

Roka Oslo

£155, Shop Roka

One of the vanishingly small numbers of companies making active sunglasses in traditional styles, Roka’s Oslo models are 19 grams of retro-modernist goodness. With sticky inner arms and adjustable grippers on the nose, they’ll be secure enough for even the most strenuous of activities.

You also get five lens options that you can match to the conditions or your mood. Available for clear prescription lenses too, they match modern performance with low-key looks.

Ray Ban Outdoorsman

£131, Shop Ray-Ban


Subtle differences but important ones. 1978’s World Road Race Champion, Gerrie Knetemann favoured Ray Ban’s Outdoorsman aviator variant. Identifiable by its acetate brow bar, they’re otherwise very similar.

They're also available directly from Ray-Ban with your prescription pre-fitted. 

Curry & Paxton, Alex Glasses with Green Clip-Ons

£215, Shop Curry & Paxton


Unless you’re Alex Zülle it’s hard to work the prescription insert look. A solid alternative for people requiring complex lenses and keen to avoid the hassle of purchasing and carrying multiple pairs of glasses, clip-ons seem very popular at the moment.

So much so, some people have taken to wearing them on glasses without prescription lenses, which somewhat defeats the object. These natural cellulose acetate frames come ready to be fitted with your prescription and are bundled with matching bottle-green clip-ons.

READ MORE

Question Time: Greg LeMond on gravel,  Pogačar, and modern cycling

Question Time: Greg LeMond on gravel, Pogačar, and modern cycling

The three-time Tour de France winner on his LeMond Carbon start-up, the team he nearly built, his Eurosport days, and why he rates this as...

Read more
Illustration of Isaac del Toro in a UAE Team Emirates-XRG cap, set against the green, white and red of the Mexican flag

"People are thinking about their kids being the next Mexican top rider": Del Toro and the New Wave

Mexican cycling's decades in the doldrums look set to end, with 22-year-old superstar Isaac del Toro leading the charge and a reinvigorated federation aiming to...

Read more
Africa Rising: The next young riders chasing the wheels of giants

Africa Rising: The next young riders chasing the wheels of giants

African cycling has already given the sport Biniam Girmay and Kim Le Court. Jeremy Ford picks the Next Ten – ten riders aged 23 or...

Read more
Illustration of Lance Armstrong in cycling kit holding yellow jerseys, standing in a dark archway — by Enric Adell

Lance Armstrong's Hollywood return: inside the Austin Butler biopic

A forthcoming Austin Butler biopic puts Lance Armstrong centre stage once again. The man the Tour de France would rather forget refuses to go quietly....

Read more
Amy and Kyle Hudson sit together on a sofa with their dog, looking at a laptop.

'A few years ago I didn't want to be here, now I'm riding around the world': Amy and Kyle Hudson's record-breaking ride

Amy Hudson got a bike four years ago to lift her depression. And it changed her life. Now she and husband Kyle are attempting to...

Read more
Like, share, subscribe: How social media is reshaping professional cycling

Like, share, subscribe: How social media is reshaping professional cycling

Social media posts from pro riders are part and parcel of the job these days — but not all of them get it right. What...

Read more

READ RIDE REPEAT

JOIN ROULEUR TODAY

Get closer to the sport than ever before.

Enjoy a digital subscription to Rouleur for just £4 per month and get access to our award-winning magazines.

SUBSCRIBE