Road Test | Slicks Suit 25 Backpack

A purpose built backpack for the cycling commuter

For as much as we may try to restrain ourselves, a ride to work usually results in a at least a few traffic light drag races (and the inevitable sweats that follow). If you don’t much enjoy smelling like a rotting durian for the rest of the work day, you need to pack a change of clothes. Enter the Suit 25 from Slicks

Cycling commuters have it hard. From rain and road scum, to sweat and strain; pushing those pedals is no easy task. This first backpack from Slicks aims to hide your morning toils and let you look dapper and composed when you step out of your cubicle and infront of your boss.

The backpack was co-developed with Swiss design house Flink, who you might know from the pivoting Ergon packs or our earlier Specialist Carry Novaris Vet pack. It’s not a cheap backpack, but it does come loaded with features. Slicks kindly provided us with this production pack for testing.

The key feature is an integrated but removable suit carrier, designed to keep that shirt or pin-stripe crease-free during your pedal bashing.

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But the Suit 25 also adds a high spec rain cover, laptop section, and multi compartment layout for getting those work duds to and from the office in tidy order.

So how did we find it? Let’s begin with the good…

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Highlights

Suit Carrier: The suit bag works pretty well, even with my ‘tailor’ made $45 Bali party suit. It fills the space against the stiff laptop section, clips in place, and offers good amounts of protection. If they really wanted to up-spec it, they could add foam tubing in the folds the way some travel brands do, but it works well so long as you don’t overly cram the pack.

Discretion: There’s almost nothing worse than seeing a suited worker carrying a pop-color strap-city outdoor pack (perhaps power-walking suits in white runners just pip it). Thankfully the Slicks pack lets you tuck straps away and present a clean silhouette if you do need to carry the bag into a meeting. We’d prefer a dark back panel to finish this statement, but it still presents blacker and better than most.

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Horizontal and Vertical access: When a bag is at work, you want to reach into it from above. But when you’re packing clothes, you want to lay it out on a bed and access it horizontally. The Slicks works well at allowing both types of access.

Level of finish: On the whole, customers are not good at paying for expensive features. This means that most bag brands design their concept, then start stripping back the level of finish on features until the bag comes in at a ‘good’ price. The Slicks has resisted this, consistently finishing their features off to a high level.

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That front pocket: Bulky and irregular shaped items are the bane of most bags. The front pocket on the Slicks was surprisingly capable at swallowing a helmet or big DSLR, shoes, food, or those unexpected hitch-hiking objects you pick up when commuting.

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General Pocketing: There’s an art to bag pocketing, and most brands fall down with it. You need a variety of pockets that act at different heights and depths. Delicate things need to be high up and padded, flat things against hard things, blah, blah, blah. The Slicks has a nice spread of pockets to carry most things well. They could do with a little more thought for sunglasses and delicates, but on the whole, it has a good spread.

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Laptop section: Compared to other bags that run a laptop against your back, this one does it well.

There’s quick and easy access…

…the laptop section finishes well above the floor of the pack (an inch lower and it would fit my 17″ MacBook with less of a stretch)…

…and it even has a floating wall, which means you can collapse the laptop section to get more room in the main area if you’re not hauling a computer.

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Commuter friendly: You’d hope so, but the pack really does do a good job here with lots of reflective bits, and proper seam sealing for the rain cover.

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Lowlights

This bit has to come with any pack that tries to do more than just carry a school book or two. The Slicks is an admirable first pack, but there’s a few niggles we think could be improved…

If backs bend, then why are packs flat? This is a pet peeve for us that the vast majority of the industry is guilty of (for a more in-depth discussion, check an earlier post of ours). If you want to carry a laptop, the Slicks is very guilty of this, with its structured form really see-sawing against your spine. Without a laptop, it bends well enough.

Weight: This is a heavy pack. All those features add up to 2.4 kilograms, which is noticeable on a long commute. There’s clothes hangers and covers and PE Board structure that all serve a purpose, but also adds to your sore shoulders. Having said that, you can just leave some of those features at home and the underlying pack is not too bad weight wise.

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Straps: OK, there’s a bit to cover with this, so we’ll start with the obvious one…

Airmesh sucks. It scratches on bare skin and doesn’t really do the job it’s meant to. Most backpacks are guilty of using it, so we can’t single out the Slicks too much, and it only uses it on the straps (with a great jersey on the back panel).

The straps are also spaced quite wide apart, and so even though I’m above average shoulder width, I needed to use the chest strap to stop them slipping off my shoulders. Again, this was accentuated any time the laptop was inside.

That chest strap also has a pretty short range for travel, so you might find it riding quite high and close to your neck if you have a bit of bulk to your upper body.

Waist strap: With a laptop in there, you can’t use the waist strap, as it would lock your spine into an impossibly upright position. But waist straps are over-rated in cycling and active packs anyways, better suiting upright walking packs.

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Best suited to

Cycling commuters who like to smell nice: It works better than most bags at carrying a suit or shirt and shoes to the office.

Overnight business: If you ditch the rain cover, you actually have a great carry-on bag for that overnight business trip. It is discreet enough, and fits well with a work/hotel routine.

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Not suited to

Anyone not fitting the above: This is a purpose built bag to serve a distinct purpose (or two). It would certainly work well enough at uni or for a general bag, but you’ll be paying a premium for features that you don’t really use.

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Any niggles?

I’m going to be a little contentious here, just because it kept going through my head as I used this bag…

By Hadrien’s and my reckoning, fashion designers work well designing bags with folds and soft fabrics. Industrial designers like things to be more rigid. The Slicks has definitely been designed by industrial designers, as it works great so long as you don’t expect to bend and move too much with it. I think the best bag designers learn to mix both disciplines (fashion and industrial), but there’s very few of those…

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Any envy for a similar bag?

The main competition for the Suit 25 comes from people patching together multiple products. There are lots of neat suit carriers that can be coupled with a cycling bag for a similar outcome, but the Slicks is one of the few that puts it all together for you.

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Conclusion

This is an admirable backpack that brings together a number of previously distinct features. It allows vertical or horizontal access, which is a must for a bag that does both clothing and work stuff. It spends the money on features that most don’t. And it shows a strong purpose in what it wants to be.

If I didn’t carry a laptop, I think I would like the Slicks even more. With a laptop, it’s just not comfortable for a long or rigorous ride. However knowing that big laptops like mine are a dying breed, I think there will be plenty of executives and semi-formal workers that find a great friend in the Slicks Suit 25.

Ando will write reviews that run for pages, he’ll never think a carry piece is fully resolved, and he’ll always call it out if it should be. Oh, and he’s a co-founder of Carryology.

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22 Responses to Road Test | Slicks Suit 25 Backpack

  1. Frei Remo says:

    Thanks for your testing!
    We are always interested to learn from the end-costumers to see how we can further improve our products.

  2. Nuruddeen says:

    Wow. Great, thorough review. It looks like a really ‘slick’ bag! Any chance you can make a video displaying some of the features? I guess this should be something that the designers should have done but I haven’t found it yet. There was a video review of this bag on youtube but the quality was poor.

    • ando says:

      Nuruddeen,
      we would really love to start doing some videos, but we know they take a whole other level of time to make reasonable.
      Perhaps give us another few months, and if our community keeps growing at the amazing rate it is, we’ll find an office junior to do it for us :)
      Any volunteers?

  3. Joe says:

    Do you know if this is this available in the US? It appears this is a British company and didn’t know if the only way to get one is to order from overseas. Looks like a great bag for a friend who rides to work from Spring to Fall and is an attorney.

    • ando says:

      Joe,
      we’ve sent an email to the Slicks guys to find out. We’ll hopefully hear from them soon.

      • Ando says:

        Joe,
        Chris from Slicks got back to us to say that they don’t yet have any stockists in the US. They are though getting a number of enquiries, so if you want to hit up any of the better stores you know, tell them to get a few packs going and pick up the early demand!

        • Chris Ashe says:

          Any more movement on US availability?

          • Ando says:

            Nah, they still don’t have US representation, and so it’s pretty expensive to ship from the UK. The founder Chris said you’re welcome to email him directly to ask for further details. I’ll send his email through to you separately.

  4. ilyas says:

    I am looking at a new suite carry back pack as i walk to work most mornings. I appreciate your review above and am interested in the slick but i was wondering about the size of suits/shoes it can carry. i am a relatively large guy-6’3″ so my suits take a bit of space. Did you find the size ok for large suits/shoes? i was wondering about this as the capacity is 25L.
    to put in perspective I have been using a highson suite commute for 12 months and it has 41L capacity and holds my suits fine but doesnt have the feature of the slick above where its hung and folded in the pack so i expect it would crease less. I want to find a new pack as the highson doesnt seems to be in business anymore and my current one has had some heavy use and needs replacing .

    would appreciate any recent updates you may have as its been a while since the review.

    • Ando says:

      Ilyas,
      I’m 6’1″, and those are my shoes and custom Indo tailored suit ($50 worth!) in the images. So my size 11 shoes fit with lots of room to spare, and I didn’t have an issue with the suit for the time I was playing with it.
      The trick to avoiding wrinkling is always to reduce friction (it’s why dry cleaning bags are slippery plastic). So if you can be clever the way you wrap clothes to keep slippery bits between them, you should be laughing.
      Hope that helps,
      Ando

  5. ilyas says:

    thanks ando,

    appreciate the feedback. one other question -is there anything else in the same league here i should be looking at ? the only other point i was hesitant about was the weight at 2.4kg, the highson suite commute was 1.25kg and i walk for about 1 hour into work so want sure if there is anything else out there i should be looking at before i make a decision on this. from what i have been able to research there aren’t too many backpacks that can carry a suit and shirt properly.

    • Ando says:

      Definitely consider a stand along suit folder/garment bag which can then fit into any backpack with a large flat section. If you source a garment bag from Eagle Creek, Tumi, etc., then you have more freedom with the type of backpack you then match it to.
      Any laptop backpack with a large flat section works well, but you’re also free to choose walking specific packs from Osprey, etc that are fully dialed in to walking.
      Haha, I’m probably opening up choice more than closing it!

      • Alex says:

        Hi Ando,

        Amazing post. This bag is exactly what I was looking for, but given some of the negative points you raised I would like to see what other options are out there.

        Are there any specific garment bags from Eagle Creek or Tumi that you could recommend? I’ve searched through a couple of websites and most seem quite bulky and I’m not sure if they would fit into the laptop compartment of a backpack.

        It’s a little daunting, how many choices are out there. Any bit of help would be greatly appreciated.

  6. Leah McCracken says:

    Is the Slick Suit 25 backpack for sale anywhere in Germany? My husband commutes to work 2 hours a day on a fixie bike. He wears business cloths at work so this looks perfect! It also rains A LOT here and this looks like it would protect his clothing. Thank you!

    • Chris Askew says:

      Hi Leah – yes – the pack’s available in Germany either through Manufactum or you can buy through our website http://www.slicks.cc . The pack will certainly protect his clothes; can’t help you with your rainfall though I’m afraid ….! Hope that helps/Chris

  7. Adam Zabinsky says:

    This bag can transcend bicycle commuters. It is a great product for anybody who enjoys exercise after work, wants to protect their clothes from the elements, and or just wants one bag for work and would like a backpack as an option. I shared this link with many of my friends (ages 21-25) and they all loved it. I could easily sell this product in New York city.

  8. Chris says:

    The is exactly the bag I am looking for. Is there anyway to buy this bag in the US?

  9. Alfonso says:

    Does anyone know where I can buy this inNew Zealand?

  10. Paul says:

    And what about getting hold of one in Australia? How much is it by the way? The Slicks site says it’s out of stock.

  11. Ando says:

    I’ve spoken with Chris (the owner), and he says that he has had to close his brand, and pass the design back to the designers. So Flink from Switzerland are perhaps looking to release the backpack going forwards. We’ll keep you posted:

    http://www.flinkgmbh.com/en/projects/slicks10

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