* I love old car ads and I love hot rodding-slash-customizing, but I never imagined the two could be combined until I saw Marc’s photochops of old ads over at the Lowtech traditional rod and custom blog. With some tried-and-true Photoshop techniques, Marc deftly subverts the carefree idyllic 1950s America portrayed in those ads. The series includes the above-pictured 1953 Chevrolet, another ‘53 Chev and a 1949 Ford. Brilliant, and I hope to see more.
* When Litwin posted the link...
* I love old car ads and I love hot rodding-slash-customizing, but I never imagined the two could be combined until I saw Marc’s photochops of old ads over at the Lowtech traditional rod and custom blog. With some tried-and-true Photoshop techniques, Marc deftly subverts the carefree idyllic 1950s America portrayed in those ads. The series includes the above-pictured 1953 Chevrolet, another ‘53 Chev and a 1949 Ford. Brilliant, and I hope to see more.
* When Litwin posted the link...
* I love old car ads and I love hot rodding-slash-customizing, but I never imagined the two could be combined until I saw Marc’s photochops of old ads over at the Lowtech traditional rod and custom blog. With some tried-and-true Photoshop techniques, Marc deftly subverts the carefree idyllic 1950s America portrayed in those ads. The series includes the above-pictured 1953 Chevrolet, another ‘53 Chev and a 1949 Ford. Brilliant, and I hope to see more.
* When Litwin posted the link...
* I love old car ads and I love hot rodding-slash-customizing, but I never imagined the two could be combined until I saw Marc’s photochops of old ads over at the Lowtech traditional rod and custom blog. With some tried-and-true Photoshop techniques, Marc deftly subverts the carefree idyllic 1950s America portrayed in those ads. The series includes the above-pictured 1953 Chevrolet, another ‘53 Chev and a 1949 Ford. Brilliant, and I hope to see more.
* When Litwin posted the link...
* I love old car ads and I love hot rodding-slash-customizing, but I never imagined the two could be combined until I saw Marc’s photochops of old ads over at the Lowtech traditional rod and custom blog. With some tried-and-true Photoshop techniques, Marc deftly subverts the carefree idyllic 1950s America portrayed in those ads. The series includes the above-pictured 1953 Chevrolet, another ‘53 Chev and a 1949 Ford. Brilliant, and I hope to see more.
* When Litwin posted the link...
David Miller of Danville, California, recently wrote us about his barn find 1976 Cadillac Eldorado convertible, one of the “last convertibles.” Yeah, we’re as skeptical of their collectibility as well, but each car does have its own story, even if it’s just another Aspen, and David’s Eldorado story does take an interesting twist…
I was not looking to buy a classic car, I’m quite content with my 1964 Chevrolet Impala SS327 with a 3 on the...
This time of year, we tend to go through our files and present to you a helping of neat stuff that we uncovered over the last 12 months. I grabbed this photo here at the Meadow Brook Concours over the first weekend of August. The biggest presentation at this year’s concours involved General Motors’ birthday bash, but a smaller gathering of cars recognized the Model T, and most of them, in a terrific variety of body styles, were gorgeous.
Here’s one, this 1926 Model T...
Scroll down through the comments under the post from a couple days ago in which we asked what you all thought about a Detroit bailout and you won’t find much motherly love for American automakers, even among hardcore car types like all of youse guys.
An even more hardcore car guy, Roger Penske, says he has a solution—which actually just might work since it would slap a fee on all new cars sold, import or domestic.
Meanwhile GM groupies like me still can’t bear to imagine a world without the...
There’s more to look at than Auburns, Cords and Duesenbergs at the A-C-D Museum in Auburn; and the IH Scout prototype covered earlier. Just across the vast hall of display vehicles from the Scout was this single prototype: a 1948 Tasco, which is an acronym for The American Sports Car Company.
It was spawned from the mind of Gordon Buehrig, backed by a group of investors, who wanted to produce an American sports car that could compete in a European-type event which was to be held at the...
Yes, we took a hiatus from Hemmings Collector Car Radio, our in-house podcast, over the summer and most of the fall as things got busy in the office. We wanted to make sure we were presenting the best collector car magazines on the planet before we spent some time in front of the microphones. But the good news is that the hiatus wasn’t permanent, and we’ve put together Hemmings Collector Car Radio episode 12 for your listening pleasure. In this episode, we discuss the current state...
Roger Hughet rendering
We gearheads who constantly examine the whole muscle car phenomenon like to thump our chests and declare our manliness by extolling the virtues of Hemis, rockcrushers and Positraction units. But we’d also be lying to you if we ever said we don’t appreciate the more artistic side of the muscle car; the aesthetic pleasures these cars give us are just as powerful as the olfactory pleasures of burnt racing gas and the tactile pleasures of a wrench on a...