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Raymond Loewy

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Raymond Loewy
Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, June 17, 2006 11:51 PM
I ran across this image while researching Loewy, and have no idea who the customer was for the pictured design. Doubt that it was ever built.

Anyone have any details/info?

Thanks in advance

http://www.art.net/Lile/loewy/images/bureuloc.gif

(I really don't think it was the C&O M-1)
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Posted by samfp1943 on Sunday, June 18, 2006 12:13 AM
QUOTE: Originally posted by TheAntiGates

I ran across this image while researching Loewy, and have no idea who the customer was for the pictured design. Doubt that it was ever built.

Anyone have any details/info?

Thanks in advance

http://www.art.net/Lile/loewy/images/bureuloc.gif

(I really don't think it was the C&O M-1)


Raymond Loewy was considered to be the "Father of Industrial Design" he was durning the 1930's to 1950's the creator of many designs, from the paint scheme used on the Air Force's Presidential aircraft (starting with Kennedy's 707, and on to the current 747), the coke bottle, and most of the Pennsylvania RR's streamlined locomotives,
the K-4 Pacifics [see this web site] http://www.steamlocomotive.com/pacific/prr/
He also designed the S-1 and the T-1 streamling features, not to mention the styling features of the Pennsy's " Broadway Limited" .

If you "Google" Raymond Lowey there is all kinds of information, and photos on this man.
He was to the Pennsylvania Railroad, what Otto Kuhler was to the New York Central RR.
Sam

 

 


 

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Posted by GN-Rick on Sunday, June 18, 2006 12:22 AM
He also designed the Northern Pacific Railway's 1954 North Coast Limited
color scheme-two-tone green with a white separator stripe-forever immortalized
as the "Loewy NCL Scheme".
Rick Bolger Great Northern Railway Cascade Division-Lines West
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Posted by M636C on Sunday, June 18, 2006 12:47 AM
QUOTE: Originally posted by TheAntiGates

I ran across this image while researching Loewy, and have no idea who the customer was for the pictured design. Doubt that it was ever built.

Anyone have any details/info?

Thanks in advance

http://www.art.net/Lile/loewy/images/bureuloc.gif

(I really don't think it was the C&O M-1)


No, this isn't even a turbine! It seems to be a cab forward coal burning duplex (the two sets of cylinders are visible near the drivers, with a coal bunker carried forward of the cab, (like the M-1). The stack is equipped with a streamlined casing, and somewhere beyond that it merges into a streamlined tender (presumably for water only).

Now who could possibly consider such a locomotive? Wait, there looks to be a name down the side - maybe "Pennsylvania"? It's not that clear, but the last few letters do look like "A-N-I-A"

As a friend has said to me, "what could possibly go wrong!"

The lettering is very similar to more conventional Loewy duplex sketches shown in "Pennsy Power III", and I think I've seen a slightly different version. There might be a large Keystone just obscured on the rear of the tender.

M636C
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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, June 18, 2006 8:23 AM
I believe Loewy also designed the Studebaker Avanti automobile as part of an effort to save the company. He did some other autos for Studebaker as well. There's a very active collector group and I believe there are plans to bring it back one more time, should you want your very own Loewy design.
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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, June 18, 2006 10:35 AM
QUOTE: Originally posted by M636C



No, this isn't even a turbine! It seems to be a cab forward coal burning duplex (the two sets of cylinders are visible near the drivers, with a coal bunker carried forward of the cab, (like the M-1). The stack is equipped with a streamlined casing, and somewhere beyond that it merges into a streamlined tender (presumably for water only).

Now who could possibly consider such a locomotive? Wait, there looks to be a name down the side - maybe "Pennsylvania"? It's not that clear, but the last few letters do look like "A-N-I-A"

As a friend has said to me, "what could possibly go wrong!"

The lettering is very similar to more conventional Loewy duplex sketches shown in "Pennsy Power III", and I think I've seen a slightly different version. There might be a large Keystone just obscured on the rear of the tender.

M636C



Gotta give you credit, "Pennsylvania" is probably the most likely possibility.

Although the characters that would be the Ns do not look identical, and the characters that would be the "Y" and "V" look more like "T" to me, the rest of your observation is very persuasive.
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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, June 18, 2006 10:40 AM
QUOTE: Originally posted by samfp1943



Raymond Loewy was considered to be the "Father of Industrial Design" he was durning the 1930's to 1950's the creator of many designs, from the paint scheme used on the Air Force's Presidential aircraft (starting with Kennedy's 707, and on to the current 747), the coke bottle, and most of the Pennsylvania RR's streamlined locomotives,
the K-4 Pacifics [see this web site] http://www.steamlocomotive.com/pacific/prr/
He also designed the S-1 and the T-1 streamling features, not to mention the styling features of the Pennsy's " Broadway Limited" .

If you "Google" Raymond Lowey there is all kinds of information, and photos on this man.
He was to the Pennsylvania Railroad, what Otto Kuhler was to the New York Central RR.
Sam


He also did the Lucky strike "red dot" cigarette pack, the shell oil logo, the exxon logo where the X's share a common cross, and the Greyhound bus "vista dome" among many other things.

Here is an excerpt from Loewy's personal note pad I found interesting:

http://img79.imageshack.us/img79/1208/loewy7py.jpg
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Posted by rrandb on Sunday, June 18, 2006 10:42 AM
An eastern road attempted a cab forward design simular to SP's by building a backwards duplex using coal not oil. Since it looks to be a duplex PRR is a possibility. They built a prototype but found problems with debris damaging pistons and seals facind wrong direction. It was unsuccessful. I do not think it was ever given a final model #. I do beleive they changed the design to turn the drivers in the accepted direction but am not sure it was ever even built. By then diesels had too firm a hold. This model appears to be what the finished engine would have looked like with the forward coal bunker behind the nose. Notice the resemblence to early diesel designs.
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Posted by Poppa_Zit on Sunday, June 18, 2006 1:39 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by up829

I believe Loewy also designed the Studebaker Avanti automobile as part of an effort to save the company. He did some other autos for Studebaker as well. There's a very active collector group and I believe there are plans to bring it back one more time, should you want your very own Loewy design.


Good news. They're back, and you can buy one for your driveway. New owners bought the company and started manufacturing the Loewy design again -- around 2000.

About three years ago I toured the assembly plant, which is west of Atlanta in Villa Rica, Georgia. They crank out something like 250 cars a year, and when I was there they were priced in the $75,000-$80,000 range. They're produced only a few at a time, and each one is hand-crafted to perfection. Here's more info:

Avanti Motorcars



"Everyone is entitled to their own opinion. They are not entitled, however, to their own facts." No we can't. Charter Member J-CASS (Jaded Cynical Ascerbic Sarcastic Skeptics) Notary Sojac & Retired Foo Fighter "Where there's foo, there's fire."
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Posted by Poppa_Zit on Sunday, June 18, 2006 1:52 PM
I am totally mesmerized by the Streamlined style, as it was applied to trains.

In an effort to apply a soul and character to complex machines, Streamlining incorporated sweeping aerodynamic forms and visually-stimulating implications of speed to autos and trains. The industrial designer's role was especially important during the Great Depression, when companies relied on designers such as Henry Dreyfuss, Otto Kuhler and Raymond Loewy to turn around the economy and stimulate consumer demand for autos and train travel.

Let's also not forget the inestimable Harley Earl, who for GM in the 1950s and beyond designed some pretty cool automobiles -- and the AeroTrain, which was an operational disaster, but had its fans (me included) who loved the sleek, innovative locomotive design.


"Everyone is entitled to their own opinion. They are not entitled, however, to their own facts." No we can't. Charter Member J-CASS (Jaded Cynical Ascerbic Sarcastic Skeptics) Notary Sojac & Retired Foo Fighter "Where there's foo, there's fire."
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Posted by jimrice4449 on Sunday, June 18, 2006 2:34 PM
Let's not forget Lowey"s finest (IMHO) effort, the 1040's Lincoln Continentals.
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Posted by Modelcar on Sunday, June 18, 2006 5:31 PM
Loewy was a giant of a talent...! I loved his designs...Almost all of that I'm aware of him doing. Even trash cans in the Late Great Pennsylvania Station in NYC. Don't forget the Carlings Black Label beer bottle label. And speaking of Studebaker....Yes, he had a major effort in helping to save the company....Long before the Avanti. The "way ahead of everyone" 1947 models of Studebakers. One of the first redesigns of American autos after the war....The only other at the time was the brand new Kaisers. All the rest of the "big three" were warmed over models from 1942.
I think Loewy was a genius in his field. I simply loved his designs....they seemed to fit right in with the way I thought stuff should be shaped.
There is a long list of products that he designed their appearance.
His 1947 design of the Studebakers probably added 10 or 15 years to the companys existence. It was the design people commented of not knowing which way the car was going....Large wrap around rear window on some of the coupes. I have a die cast model sitting right besides me here in a collection...the Studebaker Starliner Coupe....still a beautiful design {In my eyes today].

Quentin

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Posted by Modelcar on Sunday, June 18, 2006 5:54 PM
AntiGates: I opened the pic you provided with the address and really can't do much with it.....I enlarged it and put a magnifying glass to it and this is all I can get out of it....

_ L _ L _ T L T _ A I A

I blew it up so big each dot looked to be as big as and "o"....Still this is all I could get. Does anyone else "see" anything in what I've listed....?

Quentin

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Posted by Modelcar on Sunday, June 18, 2006 6:01 PM
PS: A side bar to the Avanti.....The lab I worked in developed the 4-speed transmission that was used in the Avantis for a period of time. We even had a Lark test car with the Avanti V8 solid lifter engine {no supercharger}, to car test units.

Quentin

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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, June 18, 2006 6:12 PM
Didn't know about the Carlings black label bottle guess I shouldn't be surprised though, I thought that was sharp even when I was a kid.


The "Bullet nosed" studebakers always had a special place in my heart, even before i knew that the guy responsible for the design was famous.

I always thought that Gordon Buehrig should have attained greater acclaim than he did. Probably limited himself by being content to work for others instead of making a name for himself.
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Posted by Modelcar on Sunday, June 18, 2006 6:21 PM
I agree with your thoughts on Buehrig. If he would have been doing work perhaps with one of the big three maybe we would have seen a lot more from him.
Item: My brother had just returned from WWII and had a 1946 Chevrolet convertible on order and it was taking for ever to get it so he put in an order for a 1947 Study convertible but they were so far back ordered there was little chance to get one so he waited and took the '46 Chevy which was delivered way late....Every thing was pent up demand due to the automotive production being shut down from mid 1942 to the '46 models.

Quentin

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Posted by M636C on Sunday, June 18, 2006 11:06 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by Modelcar

AntiGates: I opened the pic you provided with the address and really can't do much with it.....I enlarged it and put a magnifying glass to it and this is all I can get out of it....

_ L _ L _ T L T _ A I A

I blew it up so big each dot looked to be as big as and "o"....Still this is all I could get. Does anyone else "see" anything in what I've listed....?


I wasn't that happy with what I could read on the side of the model, but it is likely at the period that Loewy would have used a then "modern" or art deco font that did not reproduce well in the particular photo due to reflections on the model and the camera angle. But can anyone think of any other operator that would bother with such an extreme steam locomotive that also had a long single word road name, apparently ending in "A". The big numbers on the nose and the light colour (certainly not PRR "dark green") were used on several Loewy "T-1" styling studies.

M636C
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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, June 18, 2006 11:26 PM
Let's not forget Loewy also designed the styling for the Famrall (International Harvestor) letter series tractors.
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Posted by eastside on Sunday, June 18, 2006 11:54 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by samfp1943
He was to the Pennsylvania Railroad, what Otto Kuhler was to the New York Central RR.
Sam

AFAIK, Otto Kuhler's most famous RR streamlining designs were the A class Atlantics and the F7 Hudsons for the CMStP&P in the '30s. I'm unaware that he did anything for the NYC. Henry Dreyfus was famous for the 1938 design of the streamlined NYC J3 Hudsons. IMO, Loewy's S1 design for the PRR is the epitome of Art Deco design.
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Posted by Anonymous on Monday, June 19, 2006 6:42 AM
This looks very much like a PRR turbine that Loewy designed for Westinghouse and PRR. There were sketches of it in an article about proposed but never built locomotives in Trains some 20+ years ago. The real give away that it is PRR is that GG1 styled nose and cab. IIRC it was designed after the C&O turbines and before the N&W.

In the same design series was a smaller gas turbine. It had the same nose but ran on a pair of C trucks. So it is quite possible that Loewy also designed a duplex with similar styling.
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Posted by Modelcar on Monday, June 19, 2006 8:33 AM
The info of Loewy designing the Farmall tractor letter series is a new one for me....I had never seen that before. He put his talent in all directions. Again, his Art Deco designs were the greatest in my eyes....as I sure like those pleasant shapes, etc....

Quentin

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Posted by Modelcar on Monday, June 19, 2006 8:39 AM
....And yes M636C.....The Art Deco designs he did apply to lettering produced images that would most likely have thick lines and also very thin lines in letter construction and in a poor reproduction we're easily misinterpreting what really is printed.

Quentin

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Posted by samfp1943 on Monday, June 19, 2006 10:21 AM
QUOTE: Originally posted by eastside

QUOTE: Originally posted by samfp1943
He was to the Pennsylvania Railroad, what Otto Kuhler was to the New York Central RR.
Sam

AFAIK, Otto Kuhler's most famous RR streamlining designs were the A class Atlantics and the F7 Hudsons for the CMStP&P in the '30s. I'm unaware that he did anything for the NYC. Henry Dreyfus was famous for the 1938 design of the streamlined NYC J3 Hudsons. IMO, Loewy's S1 design for the PRR is the epitome of Art Deco design.

The link below is to a site sponsored by the New York Central Historical society, and is pretty interesting.
http://www.nycshs.org/images/nyc-j3-4806.jpg
This is a link to some streamlined NYCRR locomotives, of design by Otto Kuhler.
They were, I think Pacific Types, and were noted as'Crusaders', to be used on passenger service.

Sam

 

 


 

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Posted by CSSHEGEWISCH on Monday, June 19, 2006 10:22 AM
Let's not forget where it all started: the Gestetner duplicator in the 1930's. Also don't forget his designs for Fairbanks Morse and the Coldspot Refrigerator.

Most of us are familiar with Raymond Loewy's work for his railroad clients but these posts suggest the wide variety of his designs and clients.
The daily commute is part of everyday life but I get two rides a day out of it. Paul
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Posted by eastside on Monday, June 19, 2006 10:53 AM
QUOTE: Originally posted by samfp1943

QUOTE: Originally posted by eastside

QUOTE: Originally posted by samfp1943
He was to the Pennsylvania Railroad, what Otto Kuhler was to the New York Central RR.
Sam

AFAIK, Otto Kuhler's most famous RR streamlining designs were the A class Atlantics and the F7 Hudsons for the CMStP&P in the '30s. I'm unaware that he did anything for the NYC. Henry Dreyfus was famous for the 1938 design of the streamlined NYC J3 Hudsons. IMO, Loewy's S1 design for the PRR is the epitome of Art Deco design.

The link below is to a site sponsored by the New York Central Historical society, and is pretty interesting.
http://www.nycshs.org/images/nyc-j3-4806.jpg
This is a link to some streamlined NYCRR locomotives, of design by Otto Kuhler.
They were, I think Pacific Types, and were noted as'Crusaders', to be used on passenger service.

Sam

Sam:
The link is to a picture of three J3a Hudsons, designed by Henry Dreyfuss for the 1938 20th Century Limited. Note the 'j3' in the URL.
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Posted by Anonymous on Monday, June 19, 2006 11:02 AM
QUOTE: Originally posted by M636C



I wasn't that happy with what I could read on the side of the model, but it is likely at the period that Loewy would have used a then "modern" or art deco font that did not reproduce well in the particular photo due to reflections on the model and the camera angle. But can anyone think of any other operator that would bother with such an extreme steam locomotive that also had a long single word road name, apparently ending in "A". The big numbers on the nose and the light colour (certainly not PRR "dark green") were used on several Loewy "T-1" styling studies.

M636C


I think you "nailed" it. Pennsylvania. I have a good deal of experience working with "lossy" types of image compression, and the photo looks like it was at one time compressed to a *.jpg format (that is murder on text) and then reduced the palette to less than 256 colors via a *.gif format.

Looking at what we have been seeing as "T"s under supermagnification, the gray shading used on the first is consistent with what I have seen used to compress "Y"s on other graphics, and the second "T" appears consistent with what could very well be a "V"

SO, combining that with the A's and I's that appear obvious...I think you've got it

The only remaining shred of a doubt, is that the characters that need to be N's are not at all consistent, which (given the other arguments about the needed wealth of a potential customer) I think can safely be written off to the quality of the original, or a flaw in the initial digitizing process.

Now, if I just knew something about the story behind the mock up [:)]
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Posted by Anonymous on Monday, June 19, 2006 11:05 AM
Good book for Loewy fans:
Raymond Loewy and Streamlined Design
by Phillippe Tretiack

ISBN: 0-7893-0328-0

Definitely worth the $5 I paid for it at Barnes & Nobel
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Posted by Anonymous on Monday, June 19, 2006 11:23 AM
Here's a sampling of Loewy's styling for the Farmall letter series tractors.

My 1953 Super H
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Posted by samfp1943 on Monday, June 19, 2006 11:27 AM
QUOTE: Originally posted by eastside

QUOTE: Originally posted by samfp1943

QUOTE: Originally posted by eastside

QUOTE: Originally posted by samfp1943
He was to the Pennsylvania Railroad, what Otto Kuhler was to the New York Central RR.
Sam

AFAIK, Otto Kuhler's most famous RR streamlining designs were the A class Atlantics and the F7 Hudsons for the CMStP&P in the '30s. I'm unaware that he did anything for the NYC. Henry Dreyfus was famous for the 1938 design of the streamlined NYC J3 Hudsons. IMO, Loewy's S1 design for the PRR is the epitome of Art Deco design.

The link below is to a site sponsored by the New York Central Historical society, and is pretty interesting.
http://www.nycshs.org/images/nyc-j3-4806.jpg
This is a link to some streamlined NYCRR locomotives, of design by Henry Dryfuss.
to be used on passenger service.

Sam

Sam:
The link is to a picture of three J3a Hudsons, designed by Henry Dreyfuss for the 1938 20th Century Limited. Note the 'j3' in the URL.

Eastside, you are correct, and I was wrong,I have corrected the posting, [guess I got my designers confused]. Here is a link to one of Otto Kuhler's better known designs, the Hiawatha, of the Milwaukee Road.
http://www.coffeedrome.com/hiawatha2.html

 

 


 

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Posted by Modelcar on Monday, June 19, 2006 1:59 PM
Reading some more about Loewy I came across the info of his designs for Hallicrafter radio and I believe at least one version of a TV receiver for them. I had forgotten about his association with them. I remember a very early TV {Hallicrafter} model had a 7 inch screen. I might still have either a Radio Shak or Laffette Radio catalog here in my "saved" stuff.....that dates back to that era and having the Hallicrafter products in it....

Quentin

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