Automobile stylists have their own constraints. Setting aside production economic considerations, there are engineering factors such as weight distribution (largely engine placement), front wheel turning angles, shipping size limitations, and others that serve as background. Closer to the drawing board or computer terminal are packaging details. Those include headroom, legroom, door shaping, and outside visibility (window placement and shapes). Even so, there have been hundreds of distinct car designs since styling was professionalized in the late 1920s.
Thanks to such constraints, styling creativity often is a matter of details imposed and then discarded as means of making a new design or freshening it during a facelift. This detail churn was strongest in the USA during the era of annual model changes roughly early 1930s into the 1970s (nowadays facelifts are less frequent).
Today's post deals with similar details that existed on two General Motors brands during model year 1961 only: "pointed" in profile front fenders on Buicks, and rear end profiles on Oldsmobiles.
Unless noted, images below are of cars listed for sale.
1960 Buick LeSabre
This was a hardtop coupe facelifted version of a 1959 design.
1961 Buick Invicta - factory photo
It was replaced by a new design (or just possibly a major facelift) for 1961. Note the front fender's leading edge. It curves to a point that extends forward of the front of the hood. Lesser pointing can be seen at the car's rear. These yielded increased visual and actual length to the car as viewed from the side.
1961 Buick Skylark - factory photo
Even the new "compact" Buicks received the same treatment at the front.
1962 Buick LeSabre
But that feature was abandoned when standard size Buicks were facelifted for 1962.
1960 Oldsmobile Ninety-Eight
The rear deck became a sort of horizontal tailfin with a narrow rear fenderline point suggested.
1961 Oldsmobile Ninety-Eight
Here the rear fender's aft shaping is a curved taper to a point similar in feeling to the '61 Buick's front fender design. Again, the concept was to increase the impression of length.
1962 Oldsmobile Ninety-Eight
Like Buick, the 1962 facelift dropped the points and squared-up the design. Apparently, GM styling honcho Bill Mitchell decided that visual length was now less a priority.






















































