It’s all about the numbers at Barrett-Jackson’s Auto Auctions held around the country throughout the year. In this week’s photo challenge, Ben Huberman asks us to share a photo that puts numbers front and center. You can read Ben’s entire challenge post here. I look forward to January’s auto auction, not because of the numbers, but because of what’s behind them, automobiles rebuilt to their classic original design or re-envisioned as a custom classic that often only resembles the original. The opening shot features several important numbers on the placard sitting next to the car. First off, it’s a 1948 model year. If I wanted to bid on it, I would need the next number, Lot 5008. As a collector, I might be interested in the fact that this vehicle is chassis 1043, and the engine number is 33550.
As a photographer, I’m only academically interested in those numbers. They are only helpful for me when when I share the final image above with my readers here at Journeys with Johnbo. So I need a way to remember the numbers when I share the photo above with you, my photographic impression of this classic car. The first couple of years photographing these classics always included a shot of the placard that accompanies the vehicle simply as a memory jogger.
Many times, the placard is only barely in the shot. As long as I could make out the year and model, that was enough of a memory jogger, as in the photo above. The final image is almost always missing the placard, but when I share the photo with you, having that other shot allowed me to share more about the vehicle featured.
The 1933 Pierce-Arrow above is just such an example. Often, as in the Tucker in the opening shot, I feature a close-up of only a portion of the vehicle, a spare tire here, a hood ornament there. The gentle curve of a fender or the intricate pattern in a custom grille may be the only feature on the car that attracts me, but I still need to know those gosh durn numbers.
In some of my shots, the lot number is visible on the windshield. I’ve learned that if I know only the lot number, I can go to Barrett-Jackson’s website and find the Docket for the show I attended. If I search the lot number in their search engine, I can find out all those details, including what may be the most interesting number… how much was a buyer willing to give in US Dollars for the privilege to own a classic piece of automotive history.
John Steiner
Gorgeous models of an era gone by, (but I wouldn’t mind seeing again!!).
Indeed. My favorite automobile era.
I miss the lovely feminine curves of the old timey cars… Tucker, Pierce-Arrow… There are so many cars at that auction that I’ve only seen Kitschy antique advertising in restaurants. It’s cool to look at the real thing.
They are truly works of art, unlike today’s rolling toasters.