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Car Interior Color question


Jed Clampett

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Did you see my comment in your first thread? What part of it didn't you understand? Please reread it and do this in the future. Thank you... :wacko:

 

 

In the future when you start a thread put something in the title that pertains to it such as "What car had the first one piece windshield?" Where are you from? Thanks...

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26 minutes ago, Lebowski said:

Did you see my comment in your first thread? What part of it didn't you understand? Please reread it and do this in the future. Thank you... :wacko:

 

 

In the future when you start a thread put something in the title that pertains to it such as "What car had the first one piece windshield?" Where are you from? Thanks...

*

*

How's that?

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I guess cars have become appliances. Nearly all are white, silver or black. Like toasters, fridges and TVs. If you do see a color it is a dull one like maroon or a wishy washy blue. Interiors gray plastic. It's cheaper for the manufacturer. If the public doesn't care they are not going to bother about it. Quite a change from the fifties, sixties and early seventies when style and color sold cars.

Edited by Rusty_OToole (see edit history)
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18 minutes ago, Rusty_OToole said:

I guess cars have become appliances. Nearly all are white, silver or black. Like toasters, fridges and TVs. If you do see a color it is a dull one like maroon or a wishy washy blue. Interiors gray plastic. It's cheaper for the manufacturer. If the public doesn't care they are not going to bother about it. Quite a change from the fifties, sixties and early seventies when style and color sold cars.

Rusty O'Toole:

 

Yes.  But then there is hope for the future as styles change.

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Buy a either a BMW, Mercedes Benz, Porsche, Rolls Royce, Bentley, Aston Martin, Lamborghini, et al.

 

All the above cars have 'build it yourself paint colors and interior choices' under such fancy sounding titles as 'Bespoke', 'Exclusive', 'Individual' where the buyer can specify whatever color combination he or she so desires.

 

Craig

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It is all about keeping costs down, the less choices creates lower manufacturing costs.  Simple as that.  As a former dealer I have been in those conversations at national dealer councils so the large manufacturers are committed to simpler manufacturing in terms of options.  As a GM dealer for years it was not hard for me to get special paint, etc....not so today.

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1 hour ago, 8E45E said:

Buy a either a BMW, Mercedes Benz, Porsche, Rolls Royce, Bentley, Aston Martin, Lamborghini, et al.

 

All the above cars have 'build it yourself paint colors and interior choices' under such fancy sounding titles as 'Bespoke', 'Exclusive', 'Individual' where the buyer can specify whatever color combination he or she so desires.

 

Craig

Haha, jeez. When BMW is at the bottom of the list price wise I’ll just have to settle for beige! Just curious but which one of these fine autos do you own sir?

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Look who is buying cars today. Does the younger generation really care about the color of a car or even the car itself?  I know it has been said before but if you take the actual name off 90% of the mainstream (excluding exotics) cars, can anyone tell what make/model they are? 

The auto companies build what they can sell. If the public doesn’t demand thru what they purchase there will only be what gives the mfg the biggest profit. Supply and demand go together one drives the other it is up to us, the consumer, to make demand more important. This may set some off but think of the Edsel, even though it was considered a well built car, it was so ugly it failed to bring the sales Ford needed. 

We keep saying the antique car hobby is dying doesn’t that go hand in hand with this same state of modern style demand? 

Dave S 

Edited by SC38DLS (see edit history)
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This is very analogous to the early days of autos.  Even Henry Ford himself started out with nice color cars, brass accents and other nice looking components.  Then when Ford went to the assembly line with the Model T to standardize and lower the prices of cars as much as possible, things went to very basic and all black.  The specific goal at the time was all about cost and speed of production and you cannot have much variance if you want to accomplish that.  The industry seems to go through phases and a lot of that is based on what the consumer wants as well.

 

What is the old famous Model T line?  'You can have any color you want as long as it is black"

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23 minutes ago, SC38DLS said:

Look who is buying cars today. Does the younger generation really care about the color of a car or even the car itself?  I know it has been said before but if you take the actual name off 90% of the mainstream (excluding exotics) can anyone tell what make/model they are? 

The auto companies build what they can sell. If the public doesn’t demand thru what they purchase there will only be what gives the mfg the biggest profit. Supply and demand go together one drives the other it is up to us, the consumer, to make demand more important. This may set some off but think of the Edsel, even though it was considered a well built car, it was so ugly it failed to bring the sales Ford needed. 

We keep saying the antique car hobby is dying doesn’t that go hand in hand with this same state of modern style demand? 

Dave S 

 

I am not quite sure that generalization about the younger generations not caring about the color or style.  If you talk to people they actually really like color and differentiation - just look at the amount of younger people who change rims on cars.  For the average consumer today though it comes down to price and function.  This is the same thing with modern design.  This is becoming prevalent in homes because of less maintenance, less cleaning, less dusting, price, etc.  

 

I just saw in the Detroit Free Press yesterday, in an automotive article it talked about how in the US market Dodge has bucked the trend of the lowering sales of cars.  We know that Dodge chargers and challengers are the car that is different then other cars as they have different colors, stripes, and other differences.  

 

Here is from the Free Press “Despite a shift toward utility vehicles in the United States over the past decade, the Dodge Charger and Challenger continue to buck the trend,” Beahm said in a news release. "Charger is on track to lead the large car segment in the United States for the fifth straight year in 2018, and we intend to keep that string alive by updating the product to deliver the performance and capability that our customers demand.”

Edited by kfle (see edit history)
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Good art and design include color.  What painter

doesn't carefully choose his color palette, with

gradations and contrast, when planning a painting?

 

The monotonous monotones--the dull and

sparse color choices for today's exteriors and interiors--

have made me completely unwilling to buy a new car.

I think they also mean that today's cars will have a harder time

becoming desirable collectibles.

 

I'll happily own several antique cars to satisfy my

need for more color.  Perhaps in reaction to today's bland cars,

not long ago I bought a wisteria 1969 Cadillac Eldorado with a

plum-purple interior.

 

I don't wish to live a monotonous life.

 

 

DSCF4418.JPG

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21 minutes ago, kfle said:

 

 

I just saw in the Detroit Free Press yesterday, in an automotive article it talked about how in the US market Dodge has bucked the trend of the lowering sales of cars.  We know that Dodge chargers and challengers are the car that is different then other cars as they have different colors, stripes, and other differences.  

 

Here is from the Free Press “Despite a shift toward utility vehicles in the United States over the past decade, the Dodge Charger and Challenger continue to buck the trend,” Beahm said in a news release. "Charger is on track to lead the large car segment in the United States for the fifth straight year in 2018, and we intend to keep that string alive by updating the product to deliver the performance and capability that our customers demand.”

Doesn’t that help prove my point?  The two cars doing well have a different look than most other cars. But they still are “updating” what are customer demands, performance and capability, nothing about color/interior options. Get the buyers to demand different looks and therefore be willing to pay for those options and the mfg will provide it. 

 

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It was harder in the past to offer a variety of styles and colors but they did it because it sold cars. Today if the customers are willing to buy their dowdy apple crates that is what they will sell.  Some time in the eighties cars became appliances. Nobody cares about having the most stylish toaster or a car that looks different from every other car in the parking lot. If they did, some manufacturer would meet the demand.

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Porsche will paint a car to any color which

the buyer will provide a sample of.  They call

such an option "color to sample."  They will

also do any color of leather, as "leather to sample."

 

They charge much more than car companies 

used to, but at least a car doesn't have to be boring.

 

Is anyone aware of other companies having similar programs?

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How does safety features effect the option of the color of the car or interior? The customer willing to pay for that is essential. I am sure more than one design can be engineered to meet safety requirements. 

Dave S 

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My take on this is the trend in the early-mid '80s to "europeanize" American cars.   American autos before this time were brashly American in style.  Big, lots of chrome, lots of colors.  The fan mags (Motor Trend, Car and Driver, etc.)  all did comparisons of BMWs and the their like to Fords and Chevys of the day, and of course the snobs at those mags drooled all over the beemer and joked about the Fords and Chevys.  Detroit couldn't ignore the bad press.  Add to that the euro imports started getting larger market shares, so Detroit countered by offering euro option groups on their bread and butter offerings.  Off came the chrome, on went the blacked out trim.  Whitewalls were banished, and interiors were all made black to match what BMW was doing.  These euro packages started selling because euro design was marketed to be so much more sophisticated than our hokey American design idiom, and we sheep didn't want to be seen in a chromed out barge when the Jones next door had a oh-so-sophisticated 528i on their driveway.   It didn't take more than a few years for American tastes to  conform to this euro design tidal wave, and gone forever were the bright and beautiful two and even three toned interiors of just a few years earlier.  We did it to ourselves by falling for the marketing.   Will it ever change?   I doubt it, because it would take courage for a manufacturer to buck the trend.  If they were to go to the expense of tooling up for  a two tone blue interior to go with  a robin's egg blue paint job, and nobody buys it, it would mean the end of the career of the executive who pushed it through.

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7 hours ago, Grizz said:

Haha, jeez. When BMW is at the bottom of the list price wise I’ll just have to settle for beige! Just curious but which one of these fine autos do you own sir?

 

White is the only color available for the inside of the optional refrigerator between the back seats of my BMW. I would prefer an icy blue.

Bernie

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On ‎6‎/‎29‎/‎2018 at 10:22 AM, John_S_in_Penna said:

Porsche will paint a car to any color which

the buyer will provide a sample of.  They call

such an option "color to sample."  They will

also do any color of leather, as "leather to sample."

 

They charge much more than car companies 

used to, but at least a car doesn't have to be boring.

 

Is anyone aware of other companies having similar programs?

See my post #8 above for a partial list.

 

Craig

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On ‎6‎/‎29‎/‎2018 at 7:06 AM, Grizz said:

Haha, jeez. When BMW is at the bottom of the list price wise I’ll just have to settle for beige! Just curious but which one of these fine autos do you own sir?

None!

 

I just know that 'build it yourself' option is available on those cars I mentioned.  And I have seen a few unusual ones, I'll admit:

 

10hr004.jpg

10hr006.jpg

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