TECHNOLOGY
Car design, the human face and MKZ
I am not a trained car designer but I do know that there is a
relationship between modern car design and the human body – usually the female
body.
The overall shape and lines emulate the idealized, smooth female body
and its curves. Men don’t call their
cars “she/her” by accident. And a car’s front and rear are related to the human
face. Headlights are our eyes,
the grill our nose or more often mouth, the front bumper our jaw and the rear
tailings our ears – the only part of the head visible from the back.
Headlights
Round headlights mimic unadorned eyes while the new trend to stretched
and curved headlight assemblies, and new LED variations, suggest a woman’s eye
makeup and drama. Think Lady Gaga or any
Goth.
When recessed headlights are used, the ‘masked” concept is mimicked –
creating a sense of mystery as in Batman or ninjas.
This is today – with wide grills - the mouth, lips and smile/teeth equivalent.
It sets the tone of the car’s ‘face’ and can range from close lipped – thin
grill, to mouth wide open – Mazda’s new super wide gapping grill, to Ford’s
fixation on heavy chrome bars: reminiscent of teenage braces – a poor visual
association.
Bumper
Today’s wrap around front bumper is the jaw line. While more crashworthy, today’s oversized
bumpers and their extension up to the headlights at the corners, create a jaw
line similar to the Family Guy’s
Joe Swanson, newspaper Dick Tracy or Tasmanian Devil.
Tail Lights
They are the ears, as mentioned before, unless extended from corner to
corner like a hair band.
In either case, their position up the “head’ and overall proportions are
important to ‘look normal’. Dumbo size
taillights or mimi-size lights ‘deformities’ will not do. Extra colours and some additions -- as with
human earrings -- are acceptable.
Lincoln MKZ
So, based on the above principles, how well does the new Lincoln MKZ do?
The front integrated grill and headlight resembles someone smirking.
And I cannot get Jack Nicholson’s Joke grimace out of my mind
whenever I see the MKZ front.
The rear, taillight 'hair ribbon' is also sending out an undesirable message.
It is so thin as to be out of proportion to the rest of the back (and too small
for adequate turn signal lighting) and makes the rear end ‘metal’ look obese,
proportionally speaking.
So, face wise, it is an error prone design. Is Lincoln alone in this error filled design? NO.
But for a brand famous for its past car beauties, this is sad.
For a brand trying to revive itself, these ‘features’, I think, will
hurt sales more than help.
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1961 Lincoln Continental Convertible
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1978 Lincoln Continental
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1989 Lincoln Town Car
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2003-07 Lincoln Town Car
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