What’s in a Name: The Buick Wildcat

The adoption of the Wildcat name signaled an important shift in brand imaging for the Buick Motor Division at General Motors. Buick first embraced the Wildcat name…

Top 5 Rover Design Influences for the Film Persephone

Thгoᴜgh the coᴜгse of developing my new film Peгsephone, I knew I wanted to cгeate stoгy that featᴜгed some cool vehicles and technology. In addition to my lifelong…

The Last of the Giant Chryslers: 1978 Newport and New Yorker Brougham.

The last of the massive C-Body Chryslers, the Newport and New Yorker Brougham, saw their final year in 1978 as the company set out on a new…

Project Rooftop: The 1953 Packard Balboa

In 1953, a young car designer named Richard A. Teague introduced himself to the automotive world with the Packard Balboa. Richard A. Teague is best known to…

Reconditioned Wagon: 1963 Ford Falcon

Disclosure: This site may receive compensation from some link clicks and purchases. The Ford Falcon was one of the most successful compact cars of the 1960s. And…

The Car From Tomorrow: The 1942 DeSoto

With its smooth styling and hidden headlamps, the 1942 DeSoto looked more daring and futuristic than most everything on the road. The 1942 DeSoto wasn’t the first…

The Nash Metropolitan is one of the smallest cars ever sold in America and certainly one of the cutest

The Nash Metropolitan was one of the smallest cars ever sold in America, and certainly one of the cutest. Read the story behind the adorable Nash puddle-jumper here.  …

The Car That Inspired The Mustang: 1960-64 Corvair Monza.

It may not be totally obvious today, but the one car that inspired the 1965 Ford Mustang more than any other was the first-generation Corvair Monza of…

“If you don’t criticize me for being poor, let’s get in my car.”

On the joyous occasion of their birthday, the baby’s face lit up with sheer excitement as they unwrapped a brightly colored box, revealing a shiny new car…