rutt
May-01-2005, 11:05 AM
I finally finished processing my shots from my second outing to the MFA's exhibit, Speed, Style, and Beauty: Cars from the Ralph Lauren Collection. This time it was Hoods Up! Evening and Erik (Dr. It) Miller accompanied me. I've already posted some of the people centered shots here. (http://www.dgrin.com/showthread.php?t=10534) Now it's time to get right down to the motorhead pornography.
1955 Jaguar XKD
http://rutt.smugmug.com/photos/20843681-L.jpg
Man, if I could have just one car from this show, this would have to be it. I've loved this design since I was 8 or something (were there still dinosaurs then, Dad?) This car (maybe not this ]very car) won three straight Le Mans races. I built innumerable models of it and always showed this off like this with their hoods open. Gotta love that British racing green.
http://rutt.smugmug.com/photos/20865304-L.jpg
And under the hood, it's pretty nice, too. I love it when the hood opens this way. It makes so much sense.
Of course if the D-type is too ostentatious for you, maybe you'd rather have the 950 Jaguar XK120 Alloy Roadster:
http://rutt.smugmug.com/photos/20865316-L.jpg
It's even street legal.
This might be the most famous engine on display. It belongs to the 1929 Blower Bentley, the car Ian Flemming gave James Bond in the early novels.
W.O. Bentley didn't want to include the supercharger in this engine, but his racing customers forced the issue.
http://rutt.smugmug.com/photos/20865275-L.jpg
There is a great story about Bentley and Bugatti:
Ettore Bugatti was losing Le Mans annually to a certain British automaker when he let envy get the best of him. W.O. Bentley, he reportedly said, "makes the fastest trucks in Europe." -- Motor Trend
http://rutt.smugmug.com/photos/20967563-L.jpg
Compare the Bentley with the 1933 Bugatti Type 59 Grand Prix:
http://rutt.smugmug.com/photos/20962076-L.jpg
Talk about competitors with different approaches!
http://rutt.smugmug.com/photos/20962188-L.jpg
You really get your money's worth from hood's up night with the 1996 McLaren F1.
http://rutt.smugmug.com/photos/20966355-L.jpg
This thing has a top speed of 230 MPH and does 0-60 in under 3.5 seconds.
http://rutt.smugmug.com/photos/20865341-L.jpg
Erik (or anyone) what are those two huge cylinders where the rear window ought to be?
You gotta love the 1955 Mercedes-Benz 300 SL Gullwing Coupe. The body sculpture and classic styling are really hard to capture in a photo. Standing beside it, the car just radiates build quality and solidity. It has the subtle lines and curves of something that could only have been mass produced, but it has the quality of something that could only have been made by hand.
http://rutt.smugmug.com/photos/20950350-L.jpg
Which brings me to Erik's shopping basket.
http://rutt.smugmug.com/photos/20950738-L.jpg
My brother-in-law had a lot of trouble deciding, but Erik was like me. There was never any question what he would put on Santa's list.
http://rutt.smugmug.com/photos/20886616-L.jpg
This is a 1962 Ferrari 250 GTO.
http://rutt.smugmug.com/photos/20886650-L.jpg
I suppose as long as you are wishing, you might as well pull out all the stops. My source says this is "one of the rarest, and most expensive Ferraris ever produced."
1955 Jaguar XKD
http://rutt.smugmug.com/photos/20843681-L.jpg
Man, if I could have just one car from this show, this would have to be it. I've loved this design since I was 8 or something (were there still dinosaurs then, Dad?) This car (maybe not this ]very car) won three straight Le Mans races. I built innumerable models of it and always showed this off like this with their hoods open. Gotta love that British racing green.
http://rutt.smugmug.com/photos/20865304-L.jpg
And under the hood, it's pretty nice, too. I love it when the hood opens this way. It makes so much sense.
Of course if the D-type is too ostentatious for you, maybe you'd rather have the 950 Jaguar XK120 Alloy Roadster:
http://rutt.smugmug.com/photos/20865316-L.jpg
It's even street legal.
This might be the most famous engine on display. It belongs to the 1929 Blower Bentley, the car Ian Flemming gave James Bond in the early novels.
W.O. Bentley didn't want to include the supercharger in this engine, but his racing customers forced the issue.
http://rutt.smugmug.com/photos/20865275-L.jpg
There is a great story about Bentley and Bugatti:
Ettore Bugatti was losing Le Mans annually to a certain British automaker when he let envy get the best of him. W.O. Bentley, he reportedly said, "makes the fastest trucks in Europe." -- Motor Trend
http://rutt.smugmug.com/photos/20967563-L.jpg
Compare the Bentley with the 1933 Bugatti Type 59 Grand Prix:
http://rutt.smugmug.com/photos/20962076-L.jpg
Talk about competitors with different approaches!
http://rutt.smugmug.com/photos/20962188-L.jpg
You really get your money's worth from hood's up night with the 1996 McLaren F1.
http://rutt.smugmug.com/photos/20966355-L.jpg
This thing has a top speed of 230 MPH and does 0-60 in under 3.5 seconds.
http://rutt.smugmug.com/photos/20865341-L.jpg
Erik (or anyone) what are those two huge cylinders where the rear window ought to be?
You gotta love the 1955 Mercedes-Benz 300 SL Gullwing Coupe. The body sculpture and classic styling are really hard to capture in a photo. Standing beside it, the car just radiates build quality and solidity. It has the subtle lines and curves of something that could only have been mass produced, but it has the quality of something that could only have been made by hand.
http://rutt.smugmug.com/photos/20950350-L.jpg
Which brings me to Erik's shopping basket.
http://rutt.smugmug.com/photos/20950738-L.jpg
My brother-in-law had a lot of trouble deciding, but Erik was like me. There was never any question what he would put on Santa's list.
http://rutt.smugmug.com/photos/20886616-L.jpg
This is a 1962 Ferrari 250 GTO.
http://rutt.smugmug.com/photos/20886650-L.jpg
I suppose as long as you are wishing, you might as well pull out all the stops. My source says this is "one of the rarest, and most expensive Ferraris ever produced."