• CATEGORIES
    • All Categories
    • Antiques
    • Art
    • Automotive
    • Baby
    • Beauty & Fragrances
    • Books & Magazines
    • Business & Industrial
    • Cameras & Photo
    • Cell Phones, PDAs & Accessories
    • Clothing & Shoes
    • Collectibles
    • Computers & Networking
    • Crafts
    • Electronics
    • Entertainment Memorabilia
    • Flowers & Gifts
    • Glass & Pottery
    • Health & Personal Care
    • Home & Garden
    • Jewelry & Watches
    • Misc
    • Movies & DVDs
    • Music
    • Office Supplies
    • Real Estate
    • Services
    • Sex Stuff
    • Sports & Outdoors
    • Sports Memorabilia
    • Tools & Hardware
    • Toys, Games & Hobbies
    • Video Games
  • COMMUNITY
  • FAQ
  • SELL
  • US
    • US
    • UK
    • AU
  • Cart
eCrater
  • Sign Up
  • Login
  • Home >
  • All Categories >
  • Collectibles >
  • Transportation >
  • Automobilia(5476)
$27.95 On Hold

1953 Illustrated Corvette Series No. 1

1953 Illustrated Corvette Series No. 1

More than 10 available

Details

Shipping: US-Mainland: $13.45 (more destinations)

Condition: Brand new

*The store has not been updated recently. You may want to contact the merchant to confirm the availability of the product.

Tweet    
  • Description
Here's the story on this print:
Illustrated Corvette Series No. 1 - 1953 Corvette

When Zora Arkus Duntov saw the original Corvette show car, he called it the most beautiful car he’d ever seen! Fortunately for all of us, Duntov joined the Chevrolet team and started the process of adding teeth to the Corvette.

By 1953 standards, the Corvette show car was drop dead gorgeous. Post war America was beginning to develop a taste for a new bread of automobile from Europe called “the sports car”. Cars like Jaguar and MG captured our imagination. Harley Earl was in charge of GM’s Design Center and decided that there should be a reasonably priced, simply build American sports car.

The original show car went from full size clay model in April 1952 to a complete running car by January 17, 1953 GM Motorama. Almost four million people saw the original and the response was overwhelming. The only really new technology on the Corvette was the use of fiberglass as the body material. Although is was lighter than steel, the main reason for using the new material was the low cost of manufacturing the body parts. Everything else on the car was directly off the Chevrolet parts shelf. Because of this, the car was essentially a “regular” 1952 Chevy that looked like a million bucks. Even though the standard Chevy inline six engine was juiced up with solid lifters, a new cam shaft, and three horizontal Carter carbs, power was way off the mark. Probably the softest part of the running gear was the two speed Powerglide automatic transmission.

Because of the huge public support for the Corvette show car, Chevrolet pressed the Corvette into production almost “as is”. Once word got around about the average to poor performance, sales went flat. Of the 314 cars produced, only 183 were sold. Not long after Duntov joined Chevrolet, he took charge of what was becoming an unsuccessful sports car. Having come from a strong racing background, Duntov set about correcting the original deficiencies. It was all up hill from here.

Printed on high quality tan-colored parchment paper using a Xante professional grade printer.

This print comes in one size:

11” x 17”

Print is shrink wrapped on 11.5" x 17.5" cardboard so that they stay flat and clean and shipped via USPS Priority Mail. All prints are signed by the artist. They make a wonderful gift for the car lover in your life!
... [Full Description]

Title of Image

Seller Information

Seller

autoillustrated 5/5 Stars
  • Contact Seller
  • 100%, 71 sales
‹ ›
View Store

Location

  • US, Davidson, NC

Payment

  • Credit Cards
  • Credit Cards accepted via:
  • PayPal

Additional Info

  • About
  • Terms and Policy
  • Contact Info
  • FAQ
  • © 2026
  • ·
  • eCRATER
  • ·
  • Get your free online store
Last Updated: 5 Jun 2021 11:35:13 PDT
  • about
  • ·
  • terms
  • ·
  • privacy
  • ·
  • dmca
  • ·
  • contact
  • ·
  • news
Follow Us