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Fully Grilled

Photography Transportation posted on Apr 17, 2012
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Description


This is the left front corner of an unrestored 1969 Ford Galaxie 500. I chased this car through my neighborhood for months trying to get it to sit still long enough to get a decent picture of it. Then, as frequently happens, Chip and I were walking down a side street two blocks from my house and practically walked into it. Naturally, I gave it the full Brad and Angelina full court paparazzi number and made zillions of shots of it. And, now that I know where it lives... I've always had a particular fondness for full sized Fords of this era. I'm not the only one, as these cars were wildly popular. Maybe it was because they were reasonably priced and offered something for everyone. From the low priced Custom 500, adored by police, fire departments and taxi companies nationwide; to the mid-level Galaxie 500, the only car that could compete with Chevrolet's perennial sales champion Impala; to the "upscale" LTD, with so much affordable luxury and swanky style that it made middle class families feel like they were getting away with something. One of those middle class families that felt like they were putting something over on the car dealer was mine. For most of my childhood and into my mid-teens, our family car was a gold 1969 LTD coupe with a de riqueur black vinyl top and a goldish-tan interior in that shiny quasi metallic looking vinyl they used in car interiors back then; the kind of vinyl that would give you third degree burns on your backside when you sat down in the car during the summer. One of the coolest things about the LTD though, was a feature not shared with the lesser models (like this Galaxie): headlights concealed behind flip up doors in the grille. Very James Bond. And, with the exception of a Honda Civic my parents bought in the Nineties, it was the most reliable car they ever owned. On -20 degree mornings, ours would be the only car on the block that would start. Of course after the fifth or sixth winter, we'd all be shivering under blankets because all the weather stripping had fallen off as the thing dissolved into a giant rust bucket around its unstoppable drive-train. For some reason all 1969-70 Fords rusted like crazy. One theory was that Ford got a good deal on some inferior steel. Another was that the undercoating was faulty. Whatever the reason, most of them rusted away to junk a long time ago. That's why finding this one is so rare. Photographed in the Albany Park area of Chicago on April 10, 2012.

Comments (12)


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Chipka

10:19PM | Tue, 17 April 2012

I remember that day and the automotive contrivance in question. I'm not a car person but I love your automotive photos, especially when they show fragments and closeups rather than the whole deal. As they say, the devil is in the details...which is an odd saying. Kinda makes me think the devil is OCD-prone or something. But anyway...enough dissection of sayings. What I really like is the shiny business going on, especially in the faceted, etched glass of the headlights and the linear definition of the grille-work itself. The hints and whispers of other colors work nicely, especially that egg-albumen yellow in the signal light and the tree-reflecting paint on the hood. This is quite nice and I have to say that the automotive contrivance in question was rather large! No wonder we've had those gas-shortage things in the past. Those things eat a lot. Oh, and I like anything that makes someone feel as if they're getting away with something. Life offers so much for free, but we lose sight of that because civilization gets in the way. Funny how that works. This is a great shot and writeup.

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kgb224

10:37PM | Tue, 17 April 2012

Superb capture my friend. God Bless.

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beachzz

10:58PM | Tue, 17 April 2012

When I saw the title, I was sure I was going to see burgers!! I should've known, since it's YOUR foto that it would be a car. And this old classic to boot!!

)

auntietk

11:43PM | Tue, 17 April 2012

Seeing this shot and reading your narrative is like having you in the room! For a second I could almost taste Pecan Sandies and hear you and Bill talking about this very sort of thing. Miss you, honey! Thanks for the visitation! :)

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mgtcs

12:29AM | Wed, 18 April 2012

Very cool shot, superb lighting, marvelous work!

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bmac62

12:34AM | Wed, 18 April 2012

Good sleuthing Corey. I do remember these well... Love your reminiscences. Now you've got me dreaming of the way things were 40 years ago...ahhhhh:)

whaleman

1:34AM | Wed, 18 April 2012

I spent some good times in a friend's Galaxy 500 ragtop!

)

blinkings

2:54AM | Wed, 18 April 2012

LOL the owner was probably thinking 'Who is this stalker and what does he want'!!!

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durleybeachbum

3:05AM | Wed, 18 April 2012

Fascinating narrative. I will try to find the pic I took of my brother with a Galaxie he had.

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flavia49

3:46PM | Wed, 18 April 2012

lovely image and story

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sandra46

4:38PM | Wed, 18 April 2012

EXCELLENT IMAGE!

angora

4:58AM | Sat, 21 April 2012

great capture!!!


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Photograph Details
F Numberf/7.1
MakeNIKON
ModelCOOLPIX L22
Shutter Speed10/1250
ISO Speed80
Focal Length11

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