Harley Invites You to Leave a Lasting impression in Milwaukee

Harley Invites You to Leave a Lasting impression in Milwaukee

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Harley-Davidson - Living the Legend Rivet

‘Living the Legend Rivet’ lets you memorialize your love for Harley.

Have you been looking for a way to commemorate an anniversary, or memorialize a riding buddy? Perhaps the perfect way to do it is with a Living the Legend Rivet, a personally engraved, stainless-steel memento installed at the Harley-Davidson Museum in Milwaukee. The landmark venue is offering Harley enthusiasts the opportunity to make a statement that will live forever for all the world to see on the museum’s “Rivet Walls.” You can buy and personalize them directly from Harley right here, and they are installed 12 weeks later.

Harley-Davidson - Living the Legend Rivet

The Living the Legend Rivets are available in two sizes, three and six inches, and cost $250 and $1,500, respectively. Six-inch rivets can be engraved with four lines of 18 characters. The three-inch option allows three lines of text.

The “Rivet Walls” are found in various places in the museum, but most are on curving, patinated (that means rusty) steel walls on the museum grounds that are open to the public.

 

A Living the Legend Rivet is probably the next best thing to being buried on your bike. Not only is it less expensive, but it’s more practical, too.

 

Not only is this a great tribute to the memory of someone who loved riding but it also supports the museum, too. Leave your mark for all the world to see at the official museum of the bike you love so much. A Living the Legend Rivet is probably the next best thing to being buried on your bike. Not only is it less expensive, but it’s more practical, too.

You could also buy a rivet to celebrate an 11th anniversary. According to Hallmark, that’s the stainless one. Celebrate your marriage or when you bought that 2007 Road King that you still ride. Either way, this seems like a cool idea to memorialize a special time in your life.

Harley-Davidson - Living the Legend Rivet
Harley-Davidson Museum Director Stacey Schiesl in front of the rivet wall.

Bryan Wood is a longtime car and motorcycle enthusiast who writes for Harley-Davidson Forums and Corvette Forum, among other auto sites. Plus, he runs his own blog, Pilez & Driverz.