More of what I saw at the Newport Concours d'Elegance...
Tuesday, December 1, 2009
Wednesday, June 3, 2009
Shiny happy Newport
Wednesday, May 6, 2009
Monday, April 27, 2009
Let's hear it for matchless glories



From the 1958 Chrysler Ghia limousine brochure: "In one car, the matchless perfection of Chrysler Corporation engineering and the glories of Italian coach and body work." OK, reams could be written about these incredible cars, but I prefer to let the pictures do the talking. (Though I do love how the car is depicted, oriented in the same direction each time. And do you recognize the elegant house in the top photograph? Let's just say it's got a "cee-ment pond" out back — and possibly some possum shanks and pickled hog jowls a-cookin' in the kitchen. Oh yes.)
Wednesday, April 22, 2009
Dear Bo and Luke: I finally understand

Through a press-vehicle company, I had the chance to spend a week in a Bright Silver Metallic 2009 Dodge Challenger SRT8, the one with the 6.1-liter Hemi V8 and the six-speed manual gearbox. Translation? The thing rocked. I prefer European steel almost always — but after seven days of stoplight challenges (not at my instigation, I swear), The Dukes of Hazzard movie soundtrack spinning in the CD changer (like you wouldn't have done the same thing) and rumbling up and down the quiet, mansion-laden streets of Highland Park in Dallas (alarming the locals and their AKC-registered canines), I emerged a changed man. It is the most automotive fun you can have for $40,000. Thumbs went up, valets went wild and normally jaded socialites went faint. There's something utterly naughty about the Challenger — a gas-guzzling guilty pleasure. It is actually quite architectural to look at (the cheap-ish interior being the only letdown in the design department) and much bigger than expected — it's got presence to go with its cojones. And I maintain that if you stripped off the Dodge badges and glued on "Maserati," everybody would be toasting your impeccable continental taste. Unless you got it in the garish Hemi Orange. Which, secretly, I wished I did. Oh yeah, way naughty.
Tuesday, April 21, 2009
No more Millennium Falcons. Please.

Silver bullets, chase lights, projector beams, exposed bulbs, chrome rings, speed lines and LEDs: The overwrought tail light has got to go. An unfortunate trend, this need for competing shapes, multiple filaments and graphic trickery, all crammed into one fixture on each side of the automobile or SUV. Let's take a moment and appreciate the quiet, simple form (and execution) of the tail lights of the current Aston Martin DB9, above. Restrained. Organic. Bloody perfect.
Monday, April 20, 2009
On target
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