Hey, Customs are us – yes, the breeds live…
by Wallace Wyss –
The custom car is alive and well as I just saw at the annual Grand National Roadster Show at the Los Angeles County Fairgrounds in Pomona.
But it’s not a unified movement–no, there’s many branches of the same tree, each borne from that desire to make a car “your own,” i.e. to put you own stamp on it. The biggest group was low riders, but at the touch of button the hydraulics would shoot them upwards.
Grand National Roadster Show
One trend that’s bigger than ever was tall wheels, maybe as much as 22″ in diameter. I especially admired the wheels on a Lincoln Continental convertible. The part you saw was huge so I imagine they had to do lot to make room in the wheel wells to retain some wheel travel. But oddly on the one displayed outside, the owner dispensed with the convertible top–maybe because the overly complicated tops are fraught with relay failures. But my enthusiasm waned when I saw he had no substitute top, one that functions easier than the ’60s original.
Surprising was the presence of a Jaguar Mk. V sedan–the workmanship as good as any Pebble Beach winner. There was yet another Jag, was custom but one that looked like a stock factory lightweight racer E-type coupe.
Slowly dying is the multi-colored scalloped paint jobs with various hues of candy apple. At least a dozen cars were displayed in raw metal and you have to be brave to do that because, if you used body filler, your sins will show.
I saw one or two custom cars still floating on–what’s that white stuff–Angels Hair? There were a few that harkened back to the Sixties, elongated fins, plexiglass tops, bullet spinners, white button tufted interior, scallops but to tell you the truth I think they have lost their appeal. Unlike a car restored to stock, they represent an era when we knew less about cars than we know now.
I only saw one or two rat rods, unpainted, rust surfaced, Mexican blankets as seat covers, sort of Hot Rodus Interruptus, looking like restoration stopped once they got it running, maybe never to reach completion.
The location of the LA County Fairgrounds brings over 500 cars on display, some even sent from foreign countries. I met a Swedish reporter and there were others from Europe where there’s small pockets of custom car builders.
I always remember Tom Wolfe’s book Kandy Kolored Tangerine Flake Steamlined Baby, where he discovered the custom car cult. Tom has passed on, otherwise I’d write him to tell him that the species of car worshipper he discovered and chronicled is still going strong, though I’d say they were mostly middle age.
No telling what the next generation will do when they inherit dad’s low rider…
Let us know what you think in the Comments.
THE AUTHOR: Wallace Wyss is also a fine artist who will be exhibiting his art at Back to the Grind in Riverside, CA starting February 2020. For a preview of the art on display, and a list of art available write mendoart7@gmail.com.
EXCUSE ME….ROADSTERS????
Hey Skip, lots of roadsters there..one won first place overall but I went there to see what was new and all the roadsters were something I;d seen before…..