8 Design Trends That Need To Come Back

I’m not interested in starting another retro design phase, but there are a few things I’d love to see on new autos once again
8 Design Trends That Need To Come Back

I was just getting my automotive feet wet in the late 1990s when the retro design craze hit the American auto industry. I blame the baby boomers who were yearning for the cars of their youth, but didn’t want to deal with the hassle of actually owning something as old as they were.

My feelings on that whole era are mixed, as there were a few hits but a lot of styling misses. Also, the snob in me wants to chide auto designers for being lazy and completely unoriginal, but I recognise that making something new out of something old still requires a certain measure of skill. Plus, if it’s what the public wanted, I can’t fault manufacturers for trying to appeal to their tastes.

The retro phase seems to be behind us now, and while I’m not necessarily interested in bringing it back, there are some specific styling cues I’d love to see make a grand automotive comeback. I don’t know if I’d call all of these retro per se, but I think modern design trends could be made better with some help from these abandoned automotive touches.

Raised white letter tyres

8 Design Trends That Need To Come Back

I know raised white letter tyres are still somewhat common on pickup trucks, and they’ll always be around for classic muscle cars. But I’m dying to see a new Camaro with 16-inch mag wheels and a set of higher profile 60-series tyres with white letters. I don’t care if it leans towards the redneck side of things - I want to see a new performance car with slightly smaller wheels, slightly taller tyres, and white letters spinning down the road.

Hood ornaments

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons
Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

Once upon a time in America you could get a hood ornament on just about everything. And I’m not just talking about a tiny badge on the hood - I mean chunks of solid chrome sticking up like gun sights on a World War II fighter plane. They don’t have to be larger than life, but tell me it wouldn’t be neat to have a tiny chrome boxer (the dog) on the hood of a new WRX.

Big convertibles

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons
Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

My grandmother bought a 1960 Cadillac Series 62 convertible brand new, and my dad restored it in the 1980s. It was a two-door convertible that weighed 2.5 tonnes, was 19-feet long, and could easily fit six people plus a Fiat 500 in the boot. Not even the new big Bentley convertibles come close to this, and we’re long overdue to have a large, decadent, cruising-for-days convertible like this old Caddy.

Aero front ends

8 Design Trends That Need To Come Back

I’m already a bit tired of all the radically-styled front clips with huge, gaping grilles and angular openings that were apparently designed by people with no concept of curves. I’m a child of the 1980s, so I suppose it’s natural for me to gravitate towards the classic 1980s aero look. And if you ask me, no car pulled it off better than the 1987-1988 Ford Thunderbird. These weren’t called Aero Birds for nothing.

Rear window louvres

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons
Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

With rake angles on front and rear glass growing longer with every new model year, now is the perfect time to bring back rear window louvres. These were all the rage in the 1970s, and I’ve actually seen a few on new Mustangs and Camaros so there are others that feel the same way I do. There are aftermarket options, but I’m waiting for a manufacturer with the guts to install one from the factory. Let’s combine it with white letter tyres and a vivid striping package for the ultimate 70s retro machine.

Biplane spoilers

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons
Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

When the Ford Sierra hit US shores as the Merkur XR4Ti with the biplane rear spoiler in the mid-1980s I loved it. And when I saw my first Cosworth Escort with the similar wing, I loved it even more. I’m terrible at Photoshop, so could someone with better graphic art skills than me be so kind as to ‘shop a biplane spoiler on a new Focus RS and post it in the comments? I bet we’d all be shocked at just how good it looks.

Rear fins

8 Design Trends That Need To Come Back

I suppose you could say this is related to my fondness for big classic convertibles. American auto designers in the 1950s and 1960s were dead set on turning cars into jet fighters, and while I don’t think big massive fins have a place in today’s automotive landscape, I bet the new Lincoln Continental would look even better with a small pair of fins out back to contrast with the sloping rear beltline.

Pop-up headlights

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons
Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

When the fifth-generation Chevrolet Corvette ended production in 2004, the hidden pop-up headlamps went with it. Pedestrian safety regulations pretty much guarantee that hidden headlights won’t return, but that still doesn’t stop me from missing the clean, aero look that pop-up headlamps delivered. They’re the perfect foil to current front-end design trends that either resemble open-mouthed monkeys discovering their backsides for the first time, or instruments of evil with machine gun eyes straight from a Terminator movie.

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Comments

Igor Konuhov

There is a reason there are no performance cars with 16 inch wheels these days. The brakes have been too big for them since 1990’s. White lettering is cool and all but for it to be somewhat visible you’ll have to trade off lower profile, which will make the ride mushy and drop your steering crispness.
Hood ornaments are a danger to the pedestrian in case of a crash, actually. Companies like Mercedes Benz and Bentley have to spend extra time and money on designing ornaments’ safety features. I’d rather not pay extra for another badge on the car.
Big cars as a whole do not have place in cities full of traffic. You wouldn’t want to own one.
Aerodynamics have advanced. Now cars do not need an aero look to be aerodynamic. The aero look bird had a Cd of 0.35, that is a figure worse than pretty much any car in the world from the past 10-15 years.
Rear louvres not only look cool, but also increase your drag by creating turbulent air behind your car by literally making the air flow fall down the steps. Your tradeoff would be less fuel efficient car with worse dynamics. We have tinted windows for “sun won’t hit the car’s interior” these days.
The advances in modern aerodynamics do not require an extra 10-20 kilograms worth of wing on a car these days. Especially considering the fact that the cars have been overly obese for the past 20 years ruining the dynamics of the things
Fins are a danger to pedestrian safety and yeah, we should get those next time we send the man into space for the first time in history.
Popups are a danger to pedestrian safety and are destroying your fuel economy and performance figures by bein extremely un aerodynamic.
TL/DR : These fads are dead for a reason of them being ineffective design choices, no matter how much nostalgia value they hold.

04/24/2016 - 13:03 |
13 | 3

Yet again science ruins it for all of us.
Curse you, science.

04/24/2016 - 17:42 |
3 | 0

I agree with most of what you have said apart from the tyres and brakes F1 cars have 13’ wheels and tiny brake discs and as far as I’m aware they stop like they’ve hit a brick wall and change direction as quickly as a house fly. The other stuff do have valid scientific reasons for dying out as you have mentioned but sometimes logic gets in the way of fun. Feel free to weep over this picture of my Roadster which has pop up lights, wheels that stick out the sides thus creating more drag and a tyre with a fat sidewall (which I have since coloured the letters white). All the while I shall be driving around with a big fat smile on my face.

04/24/2016 - 18:32 |
6 | 0

Finally someone with common sense

04/25/2016 - 05:13 |
1 | 1

Scrooge.

04/25/2016 - 16:15 |
0 | 0
Wesly Beausoleil

How about hideaway headlights?

04/24/2016 - 14:00 |
0 | 0
Tom Grice

What about the rotary😔

04/24/2016 - 14:26 |
2 | 0
Anonymous

Why are pop up headlights dangerous to pedestrians?

04/24/2016 - 14:45 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

If a car strikes a pedestrian with the headlights extended, it creates a sharp impact point and drastically increases the chance that the pedestrian would be severely injured or killed.

04/24/2016 - 15:13 |
0 | 0
D-Troxx

Also model specific badges

04/24/2016 - 15:20 |
3 | 0

Yes! Like the silvia and STi badges.

04/24/2016 - 16:28 |
2 | 0

This one is one of my favorites.

Edit: Refuses to post :’(

04/24/2016 - 17:55 |
1 | 0
Anonymous

How about pop-up light bars instead.

04/24/2016 - 15:54 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

This.

04/24/2016 - 15:56 |
0 | 0
Dat Incredible Chadkake

I agree with every design entity in this post, I’m probably a classic lover haha.

04/24/2016 - 16:02 |
1 | 0
Anonymous

“it wouldn’t be neat to have a tiny chrome boxer (the dog)”
It’s so fun that you specified that you were talking about the dog.

04/24/2016 - 16:15 |
0 | 0
rally2727

You can’t be the past, bro. Get over it

04/24/2016 - 16:46 |
0 | 1