Wednesday, 27 January 2016
Monday, 25 January 2016
Friday, 22 January 2016
Tuesday, 19 January 2016
Sunday, 17 January 2016
Saturday, 16 January 2016
Thursday, 14 January 2016
Wednesday, 13 January 2016
Monday, 11 January 2016
Audi h-tron quattro Concept is the First Showcar from Audi This Year!
The second Audi in a row that I was working on in a wonderful team (Exterior Details Wheel Design).
I feel lucky to have great menthors as Andreas Valencia who actually finished the design and gave real shine to it!
Sunday, 10 January 2016
Sunday, 3 January 2016
First Women in Car Design
The
first post of the year after a long break. First women in car
design.
I have
been searching articles and stories this topic quite a while. About
women started to work in this industry first time in history.
First
I found a really interesting article about the „Demsels of Design”.
I have
learnd that Harley Earl the pioneer of transportation design and the inventor of the so
called "concept cars"
was the first automotive designer in history who hired women in a car
design studio. And after taht I wanted to find out more.........................................................
The
first studio employed woman transportation designer was Studebaker.
She was Helen
Dryden.
Dryden
who
was
designing magazine covers including Vogue in the 1910's worked
for Studebaker from
1934 to 1937. Automotive designer Raymond Loewy contracted
with her to help him design Studebaker interiors. Her work on
the interior of the 1936 Studbaker Dictator and President that
established Helen Dryden as an important twentieth-century industrial
designer. The advertisements by the automaker proclaimed, "It's
styled by Helen Dryden." Dryden designed the Studebaker
President throughout, and the press marveled that a woman had
attained this eminence in mechanical engineering. She
was considered "one of the top industrial designers and one of
the few women in the automotive field." Dryden
worked with Loewy through 1940.
She started her job in 1944 as a female stylist at Raymond Loewy’s
Studebaker design group in South Bend, a contact she had made through
Joe Thompson, designer there. Ms. Hodges designed the Studebaker hood
ornament.
The hood ornament designed by Audrey Moore Hodges |
1948
she began working on interior design for the Tucker Torpedo.
HudsonMotor Company, also wanting a woman to contribute a female point of view to automotive
design, hired Betty
Thatcher Oros as
the first
female American automotive designer at the company in
1939.
Oros'
contributions to the 1941 Hudson included exterior trim with side
lighting, interior instrument panel, interiors and interior trim
fabrics.
Oros
designed for Hudson Motor Co. from 1939 into 1941. As
her husband Joe Oros was working in the Cadillac Studio at GM, Betty
resigned from Hudson to avoid a conflict of interest.
The
other really important designer from this time is Helene
Rother.
She
joined the interior styling staff at General Motors in 1943 working
on elegant interior designs. She was the first women in Harley Earl's Design team. She
specialized in designs for automotive interiors, as well
as furniture, jewelry, fashion acessories and stained glass windows. In 1951, Rother became the first
woman to address the Society of Automotive Engineers and was awarded
the Jackson Medal for excellence of design.
Helene Rother's interior |
Helene
worked with General Motors for four years before leaving to open her
own industrial design studio in 1947. As her creative journey would
continue she later became employed with the Nash Motor Car Company,
designing many of the great interiors for Nash automobiles. Her
career would span for many years from 1948 to 1956. In 1955,
Rambler began selling new models for the consumer market.
They
called some of their models “Glamour on wheels." Helene Rother
designed many of the great interiors at the time. She knew
exactly what women were looking for in a car, which helped her create
some of the most stylish interior color and trim in the automotive
industry.
http://www.motorcities.org/
The
auto industry in its early years didn’t really seem to pay much
attention to women. Only in the postwar era did automakers start to
think seriously about women. By
the mid-1950s, the biggest question in the car business was how to
appeal to women. Earl belived that the best way to sell more cars to women would be
to involve them in the design process.
GM designers, clockwise from left, Sue Vanderbilt, Ruth Glennie, styling chief Harley Earl, Jeanette Linder, Peggy Sauer, Sandra Longyear, and Marjorie Ford Pohlman. |
In
1955 he traveled to the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, New York, to
find suitable candidates. The women relocated to Detroit. Six worked
in the design studios within each of GM’s automotive brands—two
at Chevrolet and one each at Buick, Cadillac, Oldsmobile, and
Pontiac. The remaining three went to GM subsidiary Frigidaire,
working on the “Kitchen of Tomorrow,” as well as displays and
details for the automotive studios. Within the car division studios,
the women were all assigned to interior studios and worked with color
and trim, as well as with interior detailing.
From
Chevrolet came Jeanette Linder’s Impala Martinique, a convertible
in pearlescent yellow
Ruth
Glennie painted her Fancy Free Corvette in a metallic silvery olive
and created a matching interior.
Ruth Glennie's Corvette |
From
the Buick studio, Marjorie Ford Pohlman created two cars. Her Tampico
Buick Special convertible was painted alabaster with a flame orange
interior.
She
also designed Shalimar, a top-of-the-line Limited four-door hardtop
painted deep royal purple with an interior of purple and black
leather and a special purple cloth.
Marjorie Ford Pohlman with her Buick |
Peggy
Sauer created the Oldsmobile Fiesta Carousel station wagon in a
metallic blue with matching interior. Carousel was designed with
children in mind, and it featured a magnetic game board that could be
attached to the back of the front seat.
Sauer
placed umbrella holders in the front doors and also located
parent-friendly controls on the dashboard for the rear-seat door
latches and window switches.
From
the Pontiac Studio, Sandra Longyear designed a Star Chief hardtop
called the Bordeaux in a deep maroon.
Sue
Vanderbilt created two Cadillacs. Her Saxony convertible was finished
in a gray-green metallic with a matching cloth- and leather-trimmed
interior
She
also did an Eldorado Seville coupe called the Baroness in black with
a black vinyl top.
The
1958 event was dubbed the Spring Fashion Festival of Women Designed
Cars. it was the first exhibition by female auto designers anywhere
in the world.
Spring Fashion Festival in 1958 |
The
immediate results of the Feminine Auto Show were minimal. But the
long lens of the modern era is more telling, as many of the special
features that the Damsels promoted—child-proof doors, makeup
mirrors, retractable seat belts, and storage consoles—have found
their way into contemporary automobile design
Before
Earl retired, General Motors became the largest corporation in the
world, and design was acknowledged as the leading sales factor within
the automotive industry.
In
1958 his successor, Bill Mitchell, did not share Earl’s enthusiasm
for female designers.
Only
one Damsel Sue Vanderbilt stayed at GM. Undaunted, she worked her way
up to being the first female studio chief at GM, taking control of
Chevrolet Interior Studio II in 1971.
Most
of them moved on to other companies. All of the women were successful
in their subsequent careers, and their accomplishments are still
celebrated from time to time in special displays by either GM or
various museums.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)