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HRN Models 1:18 1955 Lincoln Futura, Metallic Blue

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$229.95
SKU:
2-3R7-1955BL
UPC:
1511815952112
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HRN Models 1:18 1955 Lincoln Futura, Metallic Blue

HRN Models 1:18 1955 Lincoln Futura, Metallic Blue
$229.95

The Lincoln Futura is a concept car promoted by Ford's Lincoln brand, designed by Ford's lead stylists Bill Schmidt and John Najjar, and hand-built by Ghia in Turin, Italy — at a cost of $250,000 (equivalent to $2,500,000 in 2023).

Displayed on the auto show circuit in 1955, the Futura was modified by George Barris into the Batmobile, for the 1966 TV series Batman.

The idea for the Futura came from designer Bill Schmidt who got the idea for the car while diving from his encounter with a shark.

The car's official public debut was on January 8, 1955 at the Chicago Auto Show, it had been shown to the press at the city's Congress Hotel on January 5. While being displayed elsewhere in the U.S. that spring, the Futura was seen by the country's television audience on Today ("The Today Show") on March 3, 1955. The Futura's styling was original by 1950s standards — with a double, clear-plastic canopy top, exaggerated hooded headlight pods, and very large, outward-canted tailfins. The Futura had a complete powertrain and was fully operable, in contrast to many show cars. Its original color was a pearlescent white, created by one of the first pearlescent color treatments. To achieve the effect Bill Schmidt wanted Ghia ground and pulverized the scales of thousands of fish and mixed them into the paint.

The Futura was powered by a 368 cubic inch Lincoln engine and powertrain; the chassis was a modified 1953 Lincoln chassis.

The Futura was a success as a show car, garnering favorable publicity for Ford. It was released as a model kit and a toy, and, in a much more subdued form, its headlight and tailfin motifs would appear on production Lincolns for 1956 and 1957, such as the Lincoln Premiere and Lincoln Capri. The concave front grille inspired the grille on the 1960 Mercury Monterey and the 1960 Ford Galaxie.

The styling showed a progression from the Mercury XM-800 introduced in 1954.

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