Auto Sales Brochures From roughly 1935 through 1940, it was in vogue for the covers of automobile sales literature to feature strong images, commonly in color artwork, of the diagonally up-thrusting front end of each model. Previous sales literature had generally shown the front of a car in dead-on full frontal view, and the industry mostly went back to that approach in the 1950s, though some pieces through the 1940s and 1950s also adopted the diagonally up-thrusting angle so popular in 1939.

1936 Opel P4

1934 De Luxe Ford (British)

1934 Oldsmobile Six

1933 Donet ( not in Sheaff collection )

Citroën ( not in Sheaff collection )

1935 Nash LaFayette

1936 De Soto

1934 Hupmobile (front and back covers)

1935 Hupmobile

1936 Ford V-8

1937 Oldsmobile

1938 Oldsmobile

1937 Plymouth

1838 De Soto

1938 Ford V-8

1938 Oldsmobile

1939 De Soto

1939 Singer

1939 Studebaker

1939 Plymouth

1939 Buick

1940 Lincoln Zephyr

1940 Graham

1940 Ford

1941 Chevrolet

1941 De Soto

1941 Chrysler

1942 Studebaker Champion

1946 Buick

1947 Chrysler (full frontal)

1949 Buick

1949 Mercury

1950 Buick

1951 Buick

1951 Oldsmobile Rocket 88

1953 Kaiser-Darrin (full frontal, photographic)

1954 Pontiac (full frontal)

1954 Chevrolet

1954 Willys

1954 Plymouth

1960 Vauxhall

1939 Nash

1969 Mustang Mach I ( The first new car I owned was one of these, green, Hurst shifter. )
Auto Postcards There are many great images of vintage cars on postcards, the early ones (20s, 30s) mostly in B/W, the subsequent ones in color. I'll post a few . . .


1939 Buick

1940 Buick Special

1947 Pontiac Torpedo Sport Coupe
This is essentially the car on which I learned to drive. From 1941-1946—over the WWII years—the design had remained pretty much the same, with a few trim changes there and there. In the 1947, the front fenders were extended back, lengthened. About 1950, my folks bought a used 1941 Torpedo Sedan Coupe, a low-end 2-door. After it was taken off the road and parked in the back yard, after my parents moved on to their next well-used second-hand car (a 1948 black 4-door Dodge), the Pontiac was mine (ae14) to drive around in the small fields and the wood roads behind our house. I of course had visions of putting it on the road the minute I reached ae16 and had my license. I thought that my parents were on the same wavelength. Not. One afternoon not long before that birthday, I came home from school to find the car on its side in the back yard, and a guy from a junkyard well along, using a cutting torch to cut it down into smaller scrap metal pieces. Major bummer.
"My" 1941, beside the kitchen porch in 1954 (I was 10 years old then) . . .


1955 Dodge Lancer

1955 Packard Clipper

1956 Pontiac
Clicking on a thumbnail image opens a larger image . . .

















































