One frequently mentioned cause was styling. Edsel stylists were given the task of making the cars look distinctive when viewed from a distance, perhaps a city block away. That was because mid-1950s American cars had horizontally-oriented grilles and tended to look similar when seen at that distance and farther.
So Edsel stylists pulled the Old Switcheroo, giving the frontal design a vertical element, an idea being that some European brands such as Mercedes had more vertically-oriented grilles.
The problem was, this struck many potential buyers as being shockingly different, Something That Was Not Done. And wisecracks popped up such as "Edsels look like Oldsmobiles sucking on lemons." (Oldsmobiles in those days had horizontal oval grilles.) Nowadays, some Edsels don't look all that bad -- such as the model featured here.
It was based on the 1957 Ford Fairlane 500 4-door hardtop, and I always liked the styling of '57 Ford Fairlane 500 hardtops. That's one reason I find the design pleasing 65 years later.
1957 Ford Fairlane 500 Town Victoria - unknown photo source.
This was the basis for the featured Edsel in the following images. The optional rear wheel skirt detracts from the appearance of the car shown.
1958 Edsel Pacer 4-door hardtop - car listed for sale
It would have looked better without the quad headlights.
Wraparound (panoramic) windshields were de rigueur in America in those days, as were splashy two-tone (and even three-tone) paint schemes. That said, this Edsel has a nicely balanced side design incorporating those details.
The white accent color framing integrates with the aft styling.
Taillight assemblies relate to the bumper shapes below.
The extended curve of the upper backlight window frame beyond the C-pillar echoes the windshield framing, a nice touch used by later Mercurys. This is one of the few aesthetic virtues of wraparounds.
The (in)famous Edsel grille.
Dashboard view. Note the bubble-shaped speedometer housing. And the transmission pushbuttons on the steering wheel hub.
1958 Edsel Citation 4-door hardtop - car listed for sale
This is the Edsel 4-door hardtop based on the Mercury. Heavier, less-graceful than the Ford-based design featured above.
1 comment:
Four headlights were a requirement in 1958 though, in order to not look out of date. The Edsel wrapping around horizontal grilles give it a kind of grimace mouth look though. Integrating all the elements like they did in 1959 (when they were already giving up with eliminating the pushbuttons etc. and just using one basic body) would have been better. Nothing wrong with the rear design though, substituting horizontal hockey stick tail lights for the vertical or slanted fins most of the rest had.
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