I like...cars.
I like 1920s and 1930s cars. Some of them.
I like some 1940s cars.
I LOVE 1950s cars.
I LOVE 1960s cars.
I LOVE some 1970s cars. Others from the 1970s, not so much.
I like some 1980s cars. Cars from my teenaged to adulthood years will always have a special place in my heart just because that is how it is.
I like some 1990s cars and 2000s all the way to today. But the art of designing beautiful lines is all but gone. Different times. From how we as a people and society view the automobile all the way to how engineers and designers have to comply with aerodynamics for fuel efficiency and for safety. Design could still be beautiful, but we as a society appreciate that aspect a lot less as we as a society now view the automobile as a nuisance but necessary appliance. We dont value it more than we have to.
We use to see it as freedom, now we see it as a burden.
I love older cars because one could see and correlate the sign of the times in those older cars. As I LOVE rock-n-roll, I could see rock-n-roll in those 1950s fins. As I love airplanes, one could see the rise of the jet age in those 1950s and 1960s cars.
The streamlining in the 1960s cars just gives those cars such beautiful, sleek lines. When designers got away from the fins and the bulky fenders, the cars got so low and wide and lean and long. Its the opposite of what is happening today. Cars are becoming massive, and tall and high. Ive said in the past that our SUVs and CUVs are starting to resemble late 1930s to 1940s cars. Only that they are not as long therefore this current crop of cars look frumpy as compared to the 1930s and 1940s cars.
@Robert Hall said that the 1940s cars look like a bar of used soap. Well, he aint wrong, but that trend started in the 1990s all in the name of aerodynamic fuel efficiency's sake. And its gotten to where our current crop of cars resemble one another because computer calculated aerodynamic efficiency anywhere in the world will always come to the same conclusion as to which shape is the most efficient whether it be at GM in Detroit or GM in Korea or Tesla in California or Mercedes in Stuttgart or Nissan in California or Nissan in Japan...
The artist designing cars gave way to a generic computer program.
Not that there arent any interesting designed cars nowadays, but you got to admit, there were far more intersting designs back in the day...
Kinda like music.
Over the radio waves nowadays, its all formulaic sounds that rule...gone is the musician. Enter human psychology sound engineers with marketing executives with a computer background deciphering what set of musical notes will please the general population the most and voila...superstars with no ability to play any musical instrument, nor sing, but they look good, and sell "music" to folk, but also peddle their faces and bodies to other useless commodities that are marketed and produced in the same vein as their "music"... and those "celebrities" last a little over 6-7 years until the newest, freshest, cutest face comes along...
So yeah...we could move forward...as fast as we could. @dfelt
But that does NOT mean that moving forward actually means we as a species are actually moving forward, if you know what I mean...