Pininfarina - what was their best design?

Pininfarina - what was their best design?

Author
Discussion

DonkeyApple

55,381 posts

170 months

Friday 4th September 2015
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YorkshireWhisky said:
Can I just leave these here?



Thanks!
Why not. Owners seem to leave their cars all over the place. wink

BarbaricAvatar

1,416 posts

149 months

Friday 4th September 2015
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Lots i like already mentioned, some other favourites:

Fiat 124 Spider:


Ferrari P4/5:


Honda Argento Vivo:



And i'm probably alone in saying...
Ferrari Testarossa:

GPW41

150 posts

144 months

Friday 4th September 2015
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Another vote for 288GTO


magooagain

9,999 posts

171 months

Friday 4th September 2015
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Another classic.

Edited by magooagain on Friday 4th September 16:57

TartanPaint

2,989 posts

140 months

Friday 4th September 2015
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bencollins said:
TartanPaint said:
Paul O said:
Perfection. Nothing before or since is prettier or better proportioned to my eye. cloud9
slightly long front overhang, but very lurvely.
Some say he knows a lot about long front overhangs...

magooagain

9,999 posts

171 months

Friday 4th September 2015
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magooagain

9,999 posts

171 months

Friday 4th September 2015
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jaisharma

1,018 posts

184 months

Friday 4th September 2015
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Great thread
In my view the 288 gto with honourable mentions for the 308/328
But so many to choose from. Someone once wrote "Pininfarina is the master"
In view of the success of Golf mk 1 and the Peugeot 205 /405 etc which was in my view largely due to styling I can't see why more people didn't use them

Strawman

6,463 posts

208 months

Friday 4th September 2015
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jaisharma said:
In view of the success of Golf mk 1 and the Peugeot 205 /405 etc which was in my view largely due to styling I can't see why more people didn't use them
I agree the design house was superb but can't agree on this, the mk1 Golf was designed by Giugiaro rather than Pininfarina and the mk2 Golf which sold in even greater numbers than the mk1 was designed in house. It's the overall package that appealed; performance + handling+ cost+ practicality+ style.

carinaman

21,310 posts

173 months

Friday 4th September 2015
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wst said:
carinaman said:
Pininfarina did the interior of the Fiat Coupe. The external styling was by Chris Bangle before he went to BMW.
Ah, well, that does look like a nice place to be. Shame Bangle went off the rails when he went to Germany.
The Fiat Coupe is a cracking design regardless of who did what bits.

MitchT

15,874 posts

210 months

Friday 4th September 2015
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BarbaricAvatar said:
And i'm probably alone in saying...
Ferrari Testarossa:
No you're not wink

Quite like this too ...


ClaphamGT3

11,302 posts

244 months

Friday 4th September 2015
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Another one here for the Gamma - but, then, I am biased....


jaisharma

1,018 posts

184 months

Saturday 5th September 2015
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Strawman said:
I agree the design house was superb but can't agree on this, the mk1 Golf was designed by Giugiaro rather than Pininfarina and the mk2 Golf which sold in even greater numbers than the mk1 was designed in house. It's the overall package that appealed; performance + handling+ cost+ practicality+ style.
Yep quite right re the golf though I do think that good styling can lift a brand

Strawman

6,463 posts

208 months

Saturday 5th September 2015
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jaisharma said:
though I do think that good styling can lift a brand
Agreed, or bad styling sink one.

soxboy

6,266 posts

220 months

Saturday 5th September 2015
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Strawman said:
I agree the design house was superb but can't agree on this, the mk1 Golf was designed by Giugiaro rather than Pininfarina and the mk2 Golf which sold in even greater numbers than the mk1 was designed in house. It's the overall package that appealed; performance + handling+ cost+ practicality+ style.
Rather O/T but I understood Giugiaro submitted a design for the mk2 Golf but it was rejected in favour of the on-house design, therefore his proposal went on to become the mk1 Seat Ibiza.

EskimoArapaho

5,135 posts

136 months

Saturday 5th September 2015
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Ali_T said:
Don't even have to think about it...

This. By about a million miles.

The pursuit of aero has ruined style. The deep front spoiler in modern supercars ruins their appearance; like a Jimmy Hill chin on a stunning supermodel. Just compare this gorgeous profile to the 355 posted above.

RichB

51,595 posts

285 months

Saturday 5th September 2015
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I must be alone in finding most Ferraris since the late 60s quite naff...

Fury1630

393 posts

228 months

Saturday 5th September 2015
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EskimoArapaho said:
The pursuit of aero has ruined style. The deep front spoiler in modern supercars ruins their appearance; like a Jimmy Hill chin on a stunning supermodel.
Absolutely agree, and yet Daytona has aero bodywork, the pointed front, the cut-off back, the lip at the back of the bonnet to lift the airflow over the wipers, the quarter-lights to keep the side vortices from ruffling the driver's hair (OK, the driver's girlfriend - the driver was never likely to be young enough to have hair).

The D-Type was designed by an aerodynamicist, I think it's the pursuit of downforce that's incompatible with good styling rather that aerodynamics as such.

dsuk

135 posts

125 months

Saturday 5th September 2015
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