Throughout the 20th century, playing cards were placed in such a way as to make a noise as the card flaps against the spokes; however, there is no evidence that these were called "spoke cards."
Another influence was the practice of placing found on the street in bicycle spokes in a game known in 1990s San Francisco as Spokepoker.King, Parté. "Spokepoker." Mess Press. Issue 1, 1991: 5.
Maps for social bicycle rides have been printed on spokecards for the riders' reference.Charles Haine. The Urban Biking Handbook: The DIY Guide to Building, Rebuilding, Tinkering with, and Repairing Your Bicycle for City Living. Quarry Books, 2011. Page 179.
Many messengers retain spoke cards after the event, accumulating several on the wheel. Other city riders sometimes fix spoke cards to their wheels as an affectation of messenger culture. "Oaks Day Alleycat." IndyCog. 18 March 2009 (retrieved 21 Nov 2009) Many times participants of large group rides, such as those organized by groups like the Midnight Ridazz or Critical Mass receive spoke cards and affix them to their spokes.
Spoke cards have evolved to serve such diverse functions as for fallen messengers, as artwork, and as political in bike messenger association elections, and even in the 2008 United States presidential election. "One Man Spoke." (retrieved 21 Nov 2009)
Author Amy Walker advocates using spoke cards as advertising fliers,Amy Walker, On Bicycles: 50 Ways the New Bike Culture Can Change Your Life. New World Library, 2011. Page 246. however, this can be controversial since many cyclists do not appreciate strangers touching their bicycles, and spoke cards end up easily as litter on the streets.
Bike Index, a bike registration service, provides instructions for printing spoke cards with QR codes that contain information about the particular bicycle and its registration. "Spoke cards." Bike Index (retrieved February 16, 2014)
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