I’d love to have one of those too. Was the one you saw a convertible or hard top?
A Maserati GranTurismo, I don’t see them very often.
While the cars themselves weren’t that interesting, I thought it was pretty interesting to see 2 Jurassic Park Jeeps in the last couple of days on my road trip.
A 2nd generation (1953-1956) Ford F-series pickup, bright red, full restored, sporting a huge flag for Memorial Day.
An AMC friggen Pacer, on the side of the road in NH with a For Sale sign. It was actually in pretty reasonable shape for a car that has dealt with lots of salt.
I saw a new, bright red Fiat 500. One of the most common cars in the world, I suppose. I have never seen one here before.
On the way home today I saw a 1957 Chevy Bel Air convertible, with a red and white two tone paint job. It almost seems like the cliche of 1950s American cars.
There must have been some sort of cruise in or other car event going on this evening. In a single block I saw a 1958 Impala, what I’m pretty sure was a 1933 Ford convertible (I’m not great at IDing pre-war cars), and a mid 1960s Chevelle.
I’ve been on a steak of interesting cars of late (and I think California probably has an above average number of interesting cars). On this evening’s commute I saw a Volvo P1800 coupe and a Porsche 356 Speedster.
The Ford show is in town this week. If I go on Sunday I’ll make a list.
Had an old Chevy Cavalier behind me earlier. Looked a lot older than the 80s vintage model that it was.
“Non-restored” to say the least. Primer gray hood, mismatched roof color, etc.
I think the hood pins were … not the best option for this car.
The new Aston Martin Vantage and Holy Hell that is one good looking car. Even in a color I would liken to Matte Turd Brown, the car looked awesome. I especially like that you can actually distinguish it from all the other Aston models. Ironically (or perhaps not) it was driving past the Aston Martin North America headquarters in Irvine which, for such a high end automaker, their building always reminds me of a place that should be selling faucets or kitchen tile.
Also saw the new BMW 3 series (G20). Meh.
A 2019 GMC pickup with the new MultiPro tailgate, first one I’ve seen in the wild.
And a Series II (1981-1991) Jaguar XJS coupe, a car I always thought looks great.
I’m glad you’re seeing them because I’ve been in a drought!
A threesome for me this week: A DB9 convertible in Grey (Freakin’ gorgeous car!), a New Fiat Spyder (Miata), and a JDM Purple Nissan GTR. Ah, Summer when all the fun cars come out to play!
Blue-ish gray 4-door Ford sedan. 1961 or 1962.
Ever since I was a kid, I always called them “Andy Griffith” cars. ( from the B&W era of the show )
Two today.
First generation Buick Wildcat, a very large two door car in a pretty blue green color. Not pristine, but in good shape.
Second, a mid-1960’s Porsche 911 in showroom condition, in white.
While out for a walk today I saw a 1990s Cadillac Fleetwood. Really, though, the interesting thing about it was that it had whitewall tires. Now that’s not something you often see anymore.
I’m not sure where to start. Today I spent a few hours sitting on the patio of a place and watched so many interesting cars and motorcycles go past. I was with my son who is also a car guy (and my wife who didn’t get our excitement). There wasn’t a car show going on but this must be the day that everyone decided to take their toys out. I’m not exactly sure on all of these but I think I’m pretty close.
1971 or so Corvette Stingray with side pipes.
442 convertible
Brand new 911
1968 or so convertible Camaro
Several current Corvettes, Porsches, and Mustangs
The cherry on top was a brand new Bentley Continental GT that appeared to be modified with hood scoops and a rear wing. That one parked so I got a good look at it.
A Mercedes-AMG S65. I could get into using that as a daily driver, for sure.