By 1940 most of the spe******ed coachbuilders like Bohman Schwartz and Coachcraft Ltd were dying out . The war intervened and gave rise to home based customisers and spe******ed Custom shops like Westergard and Barris. Let’s see the Coachbuilt marvels that often dictated the styling trends that Detroit followed.
There was someone here that was putting together a book about Coachcraft. was watching but never saw the finished product.
I have little to add but I hope this thread takes off, I'd very much like to do a build like this in the future. Most likely cutting up a big sedan and "rebodying" it into a roadster or short roof coupe. There were a few really great build threads years ago, mostly involving pre-war Cadillacs, although I haven't seen any of them updated in a while.
[QUOTE="CadMad, View attachment 4535513 [/QUOTE] I am currently building the body for the Miller burden continuation roadster
I hate to hijack this thread but has anyone ever successfully pulled off the exposed plumbing look like this on a 33/34 Ford car? Are they just not long enough for the proportions to look right? I adore the look of this car.
Wow! I nearly died and went to heaven when I discovered the Burden V16 story only recently. Fantastic that it’s being done!!!
I saw this picture when I was 10. Always loved the car. Decided to try and build a poor mans version out of a 33 Plymouth.
Gable’s Duesy was done by Bohman Schwartz. I think it was 1937. It was a rebody of an earlier Duesy. I’m sure it influenced many a Custom guy.
I can't remember what he goes by on here but one of our members who I think is in Austin has done some fantastic photo shop coach built cl***ic do overs that he has shared on FB at times. One of his works here that would really work Old enough to be Hamb friendly too.
Great thread! I just got a copy of *Cars of the Thrilling Thirties* fir Christmas and a lot of the photos of high-end cars (Cads, Packard, Auburn, etc) are coach-built bodies. It was eye-opening to see how much Westergard and the Barris Brothers were clearly stealing from those cars. Apparently I have expensive taste because I love most of these machines. Keep posting!
Wrong ***le: it's "Cars of the CL***IC '30s: A Decade of Elegant Design" A Packard, a Chrysler, a Lincoln, and a Stutz
What I'd like to know is how to build one of those duvall style windshields from scratch. I imagine they were formed in wood, then cast. Any thoughts appreciated.
I’m gonna try and fabricate one in Stainless shortly for my 39 Packard. I have a good foundry just near me but to my mind to make the bucks will be as much work as fabricating. Bert Gustafson’s 41 Cadillac Custom has a sublime screen.