In the past, I've ridden men's frames. I'm 5'10″ and there's been a lack of options in women-specific frames, especially for taller women. But recently, a lot of companies have been logging R&D overtime in order to design frames fit for all women. Women tend to have shorter arms, narrower shoulders, smaller hands, a less-balanced leg-to-torso ratio, and we generally tend to weigh 15 percent less than men. The following rigs have been built鈥攁nd tested鈥攚ith those dimensions in mind.
— writes the Gear Girl column for 国产吃瓜黑料

Mountain:
The Specialized X-Works Era Carbon ($8,800鈥攂ut don鈥檛 panic, the Era line starts at $2,800; ) is the choice of champions like Rebecca Rusch. It鈥檚 also my dream mountain bike. Similar in design to the men鈥檚 game-changing Epic, the 鈥渂rain鈥 suspension in the front and rear allows you to ride uphill as if you鈥檙e on a hard tail and downhill as if you鈥檙e on a cushiony full-suspension bike鈥攂ecause you are. Why the Era is so good for women: The suspension is tuned to average women鈥檚 weights (generally 15 percent lighter than men), the carbon frame is super lightweight and designed to fit a female form, and, as is the case with all Specialized women鈥檚 bikes, the handlebars are designed for smaller hands and shoulder widths and the seat is designed for a woman鈥檚 bum鈥攁 beautiful thing when you鈥檙e in the saddle all day.
A lot of my female friends ride an Orbea Diva from 2009 or 2010 (; still available at a discount under 鈥淪hop Specials and Incentives鈥 on the site). Not only does the frame鈥攚hich is built in Spanish Basque country鈥攍ook beautifully feminine, it also fits most women like a glove. To accommodate for general anatomical differences like women鈥檚 shorter arms and less balanced leg-to-torso ratio, Orbea shortened the top tube, lengthened the head tube, and used different angles than they use on their men鈥檚 frame.聽 The big news, however, is that late this summer Orbea is coming out with their new full-carbon women鈥檚 Dama Silver ($2,500 for frame, fork, and seatpost) and Gold ($3,500 for frame, fork, and seatpost). Be prepared to love it.
Touring:
Terry Precision鈥檚 tremendously versatile Valkyrie Tour ($3,100; ) is the direct result of company founder Georgena Terry鈥檚 hands-on expertise. She started building bikes in her basement in 1986. The Valkyrie, a hand-built frame (now made in Wisconsin) using Waterford OS2 steel tubing, uses a 26鈥 mountain bike tire instead of a more standard 700c. Not only does that make the bike easier to ride on road and off, it鈥檚 also a lot easier to find a tire along the way, should you run out of spares. Best of all, with its extremely low gearing controlled by bar-end shifters, you could climb the side of a mountain hauling 60 pounds of stuff.
It鈥檚 hard not to love Nirve鈥檚 Hello Kitty-Retro Kitty Cruiser ($350; ). Any girl who grew up riding a flowered banana-seat bike with a flowery basket will want this classic one speed, complete with fenders, kickstand, and Hello Kitty bell. If the pink and white retro theme is a wee bit over the top, Nirve has a slightly more subdued line of cruisers鈥攁ll fun for tooling around town.