The transition from the 50's fins cars into the early 60's was a challenge for all makes. I'd say it was the most awkward car styling era of them all. There are hits and misses. I personally like the cars of that period because of they are different and under-appreciated...... especially Mopars. In fact, I think the 61 Chrysler Newport hardtop was the most beautiful car ever made (Newport because it had a cleaner grille than the 300 and New Yorker). The massive fins, canted headlights, sweeping roof line, tapered deck lid, and astrodome dash are just so distinctive.
The only Mopar styling that I did not like was the dowdy roofs of the late 40's and early 50's cars. The roofs are very square, tall, and wide and all the glass too flat.
I agree with that assessment of the periods' designs.
The late 50's had devolved into a great big pi$$ing contest between makes of "oh yeah? Well, how about THIS!?!!"
as they constantly tried to out-do one another in MORE fin, MORE chrome, MORE spear this or spike that...
It had to peak/crash at some point - and once it did, I don't think any of the manufacturers knew where to go
from there with things.
I mean, where do you go from TOO MUCH EVERYTHING??
Turned out, back to square one - clean lines, simpler....ok, a bit plain-Jane, really.
Design was mirroring our society in general, if you think about it - we were transitioning from all the exuberance
and sky's-the-limit optimism that was the post-war 50's to the cold hard realities of a harsh recession and the
sudden possibility of nuclear war with a new enemy.
Humans are quite the fickle beings, turns out.
