Monday, April 15, 2013

What's Wrong With This Picture? Antique Auto Advertising Edition ...

While researching the topic of the ?blackout? cars of 1942, that had painted rather than plated trim due to wartime restrictions on strategic metals, I came across this promotional postcard for the 1942 DeSoto, the second American production car to feature hidden headlights, advertised as ?airfoil lights? . ?Boy,? I thought, ?Now that?s a sleek, streamlined car, I?m surprised I don?t remember it,? well until I saw a photograph of an actual ?42 DeSoto.

Not quite the same, is it? While the hidden headlights, the grille treatment and lack of running boards are modern for their day, the real ?rocket body? is rather stodgy, certainly not nearly as sleek as the car on the postcard.

We live in an era where every contour in a production car that deviates from its concept show car is noted and discussed. I can?t help but wonder how many potential DeSoto customers were disappointed to see that there was some bait and switch going on with the new 1942 De Soto, as advertised. So far, I?ve only found a couple of instances where DeSoto used an actual photograph or a properly scaled drawing in advertising for the ?42. Almost all of the period advertising uses some variation of the drawing above. All of the drawings make the car look lower, wider, and sleeker than it actually was. The one photo illustrated ad uses an elevated front 3/4 beauty shot, a perspective that makes the roofline look much lower. The one ad that uses a properly scaled drawing emphasizes the stolid reliability and safety of DeSotos with ?7 out of 10? still running?. I can understand why they didn?t use the racier streamlined drawings for that particular advertisement.

For the rest of the car?s marketing, it?s pretty obvious why DeSoto?s marketers went with the drawings. It?s a much better looking car. I think I know where they got the idea for those drawings too. That lower, sleeker look is reminiscent of how car designers do a preliminary sketch of a car, exaggerating for effect. Perhaps consumers 70 years ago were more tolerant of such exaggerations in advertising.

DeSoto Cyclone concept by Alex Tremulis

The drawing in the ad could have originated with sketches at the Briggs body company?s design studio, where Alex Trumulis and Ralph Roberts worked on the Chrysler?s first concept cars, the Newport and Thunderbolt. Chrysler was a bit slower than the other two big Detroit car companies to style cars in-house, relying mostly on the designers at Briggs instead. Like the ?42 DeSoto, the Thunderbolt sports cars and at least one of the dual cowl Newport parade cars had hidden headlights.

If you look at Tremulis? stillborn DeSoto Cyclone concept car, which was supposed to be Chrysler?s third concept car before World War Two intruded, I don?t think it?s much of a stretch to say that Tremulis probably had a role in the design of the 1942 DeSoto. The design patent for the ?42 DeSoto?s front end was granted to Robert Cadwallader, ?Chrysler?s head stylist, but it?s not unusual for styling executives to put their name on others? work. Harley Earl?s name is all over GM design patents for designs rendered mostly by designers who worked for him.

There?s also a bit of similarity between the drawing style in the DeSoto ads and Tremulis? Cyclone sketch. I doubt that Tremulis drew the actual images used in the ads, but again, I don?t think it?s much of a stretch to say that the ads were influenced by design studio drawings of the car.

In some ways I?m reminded of another Chrysler concept car, by Pininfarina. You may have heard of the so-called Exner-Ghia concepts, idea and show cars that were primarily designed by Virgil Exner Sr?s staff at Chrysler in Detroit and then built in Italy by the coachbuilding craftsmen at Ghia. Before Chrysler picked Ghia they had a competition between that shop and the one of Pinin Farina. Ironically, Pininfarina more or less followed the supplied drawings while Ghia did their own thing, producing the Plymouth XX-500, which looked nothing like a late ?40s Plymouth. Ghis still got the deal because of their outstanding metal work, finishing details, and incredibly cheap by Detroit standards pricing.

The drawings used in the DeSoto ads remind me a little of the original drawing on which Pininfarina?s Plymouth concept was based (well, that and Van Dyke Parks? work for Little Feat). That car?s been lost to history and it?s nearly as well known as the XX-500. The Peninfarina Plymouth was one of those obscure idea cars that Detroit forgets, but David Fetherston and Tony Thacker were able to track down a concept drawing and a photograph of the finished car for their book on Chrysler concepts.

As you can see, the finished Pininfarina Plymouth had a low, sleek roofline, not as low or as sleek as the ?42 Desoto drawing or as on Tremulis? Cyclone, but hardly as upright as the production DeSoto (am I alone in seeing some Porsche Panameralike lines from the A pillar back?). As drawn, the 1942 DeSoto was a great looking car, as built, not so much. To be honest, I think it?d be a cool idea for someone like Troy Trepanier or Murray Pfaff to take a ?42 DeSoto and ?turn it into a real version of the drawings used in advertising that car.

Ronnie Schreiber edits?Cars In Depth, a realistic perspective on cars & car culture and the original 3D car site. If you found this post worthwhile, you can dig deeper at?Cars In Depth. If the 3D thing freaks you out, don?t worry, all the photo and video players in use at the site have mono options. Thanks ? RJS

Source: http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com/2013/04/whats-wrong-with-this-picture-antique-auto-advertising-edition/

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