"I suspect that most readers of this blog have warm places in their hearts for some of the cars their families had when they were young. That's certainly true for me. One of those cars was the 1962 Buick Skylark Sport Coupe with the body painted black and the top painted white. Plus having a red interior."
Today's post is a Walkaround regarding that design. Some Skylark background is here.
As noted in a caption below, subject car photos were taken using a wide-angle lens. That made the car look longer, sleeker than actuality. Yet I used that set because the expected eight viewpoints were available (decent images sets of 1961/62 Skylarks are still rare on the Web). Also, because the car had monochrome paint, the photos provide a better feeling for body sculpting.
1961 Buick Skylark Coupe - General Motors photos
First-year Skylarks were coupes with fixed B-pillars. For 1962 they became hardtop coupes with no visible B-pillars.
Most 1961/62 Skylarks were two-tone. The 1962 model my parents owned had a black-and-while scheme such as the one shown here.
1962 Buick Skylark Hardtop Coupe - car-for-sale photos
Frontal styling is quite similar to that of standard-size '61 Buicks. The main differences are grille bars and small pseudo-bumper guards on the larger cars.
This image is a test of the preceding one that was probably taken with a lens set in the wide-angle direction. Nowadays many car photos seen via the Internet are wide-angle. Sometimes that is necessary -- when the subject is in a cramped area where the photographer cannot stand away far enough that a normal setting can include the entire car. The GM photo here was taken by a professional and can be considered essentially accurate. The previous photo shows the car as being longer. Try to ignore the distortion and focus on design details.
Buick's "compact" Special line included coupes with the same body as seen here. Skylarks can be distinguished from mere Specials thanks to the wraparound tail light assemblies.
Rear detailing is horizontal-rectangular, unlike the multi-shaped sculpting on many of today's cars and SUVs.
The rear deck flares outward over the rear fender zone, a continuation of a form beginning at the front end.
That unifying sculpting is seen better here. The lower sculpted line subtly hints at Buick's classic SweepSpear side-chrome motif such as found on 1953 Skylarks. Front fenders sport rectangular echoes of Buick's 1949 "portholes."
The pointed fender fronts found here and all 1961 Buicks disappeared on standard-size 1962 Buicks, but were retained on Specials and Skylarks until 1963.
And an example of the red interior.


















































