Cover stories: Issue 20.5 by Sean Hardy

Cover stories: Issue 20.5 by Sean Hardy

This year’s Tour de France will be unlike any other. For our Tour special we needed a cover to match. Longtime Rouleur photographer Sean Hardy stepped up

Coronavirus Cover Stories cover story illustration Magazine covers Racing rouleur magazine Sean Hardy Tour de France

One of the perks of being a Rouleur member is getting a magazine through your door with a classy, cool and collectable cover. Our talented contributors give you the back story on each creation. For issue 20.5, our Tour de France special, we set longtime Rouleur regular Sean Hardy the task of representing the ‘strange times’ we’re living in.

It all started with [Rouleur Executive Editor] Ian Cleverly getting in touch to ask if I was up for going for the cover.

The New York Times Magazine had done one that was just a mask with an “I voted” sticker on it. We had the idea of tying that to cycling with a 60s-style helmet and sunglasses.

Rouleur wanted to see one just with the mask, so I took a few shots but it just looked too similar to the inspiration. A bit clinical, really.

The way we created that shoot, the one that’s now the cover, began with a mannequin that I picked up from a mate down the road. We thought we’d put the mask on the mannequin and Photoshop it out, to make it hollow, like the invisible man, or rider in this case.Rouleur 20.5

Pop!

Although I can use Photoshop, I’m not an expert. Removing a mannequin just bent my head. I asked myself if we could include the mannequin. Would it look good with that? It didn’t. Then we thought we’d try it with an inflated balloon, which we’d pop, leaving everything in the same place. We filled the balloon with confetti, because we thought it might be good to have an explosion. Again, that didn’t work: nothing ever stayed straight, the glasses ended up looking like someone had taken a punch, and the mask didn’t look like a face.

We ended up shooting with the helmet and the glasses attached by wires, before removing them in Photoshop. The mask was on my partner’s face, which we cropped out and added in the bits round the ears. The hand is actually mine. I have super hairy arms, like Robin Williams, which I would have looked really bad in shot, so I shaved my arm. It itched for days. The hairs are growing back now, but they’re not the same as they were.

The arm wasn’t in the original brief, actually. The reason I’m holding a banana is because riders cycle with bananas, and it’s yellow, and I wanted to run that theme through. There was an edit where the banana had a phone cord that ran down the bottom. The reference was that when I was shooting we were still pretty locked down, and by phone and internet was how I was connecting with everyone. We tweaked it a bit, did it in a few different colours just to see what it looked like. 

Rouleur 20.5

There was also a blue one, a faded pink one and a red one. For me the blue was the one. I’ve always been anti cliché. You knew that you were going to take a shot with the yellow, but as a photographer, you’d want it to be the one that wasn’t. We didn’t want it to scream cycling but with the Tour de France coming up, of course it made sense to go with the yellow.

There were a lot of 4am finishes on just that one photo, just to get the perspective right.  The cover is something I will always be hugely proud of. I like that it’s arty but that it hasn’t gone too far, and that it’s different to the kind of thing I’m known for. If I put it on my page, you’d have to tell people that I took that photo. 

More Rouleur cover stories

I think it was important to acknowledge everything that’s been happening. The mask is like a timestamp. There’s countless Rouleur covers that I love, but most of them could be from any time, any moment.

I have copies of all the magazines I’ve shot for but this is a Rouleur cover and that’s huge for me. It will probably be the one that we frame, because it felt like it was done by the family, it wasn’t a photo that I went out to take. My stepdaughter held the wire, my son broke the glasses, the mask was on my partner’s face. That’s our lockdown, that photo.

You can see more of Sean’s work at hardycc.co.uk or follow him on Instagram.

Subscribe by July 28th to receive Rouleur 20.5

 
 

The post Cover stories: Issue 20.5 by Sean Hardy appeared first on The world's finest cycling magazine.

Coronavirus Cover Stories cover story illustration Magazine covers Racing rouleur magazine Sean Hardy Tour de France

READ MORE

Is Marlen Reusser now the biggest rival to Demi Vollering at the Tour de France Femmes?

Is Marlen Reusser now the biggest rival to Demi Vollering at the Tour de France Femmes?

After her victory at the Tour de Suisse, the Movistar rider has announced herself as a serious contender for the yellow jersey 

Leggi di più
Domination and revelations: The Dauphiné showed us more than just Tadej Pogačar's continued superiority

Domination and revelations: The Dauphiné showed us more than just Tadej Pogačar's continued superiority

The final showdown before the Tour de France; what exactly did we learn from eight days at the Critérium du Dauphiné?

Leggi di più
Final Tour de France podium 2024

Tour de France favourites 2025: who will win the yellow jersey?

A look at who the bookmakers are backing to win the general classification at this year's Tour

Leggi di più
Julius Johansen

The incredible comeback story of Tadej Pogačar’s new teammate after WorldTour rejection

He won a world road race title before Tadej Pogačar, but the blonde-haired Dane had to suffer a painful rejection before finally reaching the top

Leggi di più
First blood in the mountains: What does Pogačar's crushing Dauphiné stage win tell us about the Tour?

First blood in the mountains: What does Pogačar's crushing Dauphiné stage win tell us about the Tour?

Time trial gains for Jonas Vingegaard, first mountain domination for Tadej Pogačar. Are we set for a close-fought Tour de France?

Leggi di più
Joao Almeida

Tour de Suisse 2025 preview: Almeida the man to beat?

With the big hitters fighting it out in the Critérium du Dauphiné, there's a golden opportunity for a WorldTour victory at the Tour de Suisse

Leggi di più

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