Some vehicles at the Revs Institute grabbed me differently when I faced them squarely from the front.
My vote for the most beautiful automobile at Revs Institute:
1937 Delahaye (Type 135MS Special Roadster)
1914 Rolls-Royce (Silver Ghost Tourer).
A snowbird shows photos from southwest Florida (Naples) and southwest Connecticut (Ridgefield) and New England and other places he goes.
Some vehicles at the Revs Institute grabbed me differently when I faced them squarely from the front.
My vote for the most beautiful automobile at Revs Institute:
1937 Delahaye (Type 135MS Special Roadster)
1914 Rolls-Royce (Silver Ghost Tourer).
Let's see more cars from the Revs Institute in Naples, this time without a lot of explanatory text. Anyone captivated by specific cars can look them up in the Revs "View The Cars" pages.
This 1954 Osca, built in Italy by the Maserati brothers and driven by Sterling Moss, was a surprise winner at the 12 Hours of Sebring in 1954.
Continuing at the Revs Institute. Let's see some other cars.
1908 Mors (Grand Prix car). More automobiles began in England a few years before an American company was licensed to make them. Bad businessmen, their advertising punned about death and they rushed vehicles like this one into races before they were ready.
Andre Citroen left the company and did far better on his own.
A 1934 LaSalle (Series 350 Convertible Coupe). Ford built "one size fits all" cars, General Motors built cars to fit different wallets. LaSalle was below Cadillac and above Oldsmobile with Art Deco features. It was an artistic triumph, though it declined in the 1930s as tastes moved toward smaller vehicles.
Last week I toured this remarkable Naples museum of 112 superb vehicles, most of them exquisite and perfect examples. Many of the automobiles had won major international races. A very knowledgeable college friend who has been a docent for 33 years led the tour.
Three beautiful red sports cars sit in the entrance hall, below photographs of some of the men who were luminaries in the early days of the automobile industry. The three sports cars are a 1965 Ferrari (250 LM Berlinetta GT), a 1964 Porsche (904 Carrera GTS) and a 1964 Alfa Romeo (Guila TZ).
Here is a 1952 Lancia (Aurelia B20 GT Series II), an Italian post-war automobile with numerous technical innovations, styling advances and racing successes.
More automobiles tomorrow.
I am not a car guy. I know just about nothing about cars beyond steering wheel, brakes and radio. Information about these vehicles is "borrowed" from plaques beside the cars and a valuable car-by-car description from the Revs Institute website.
When photographing birds, I like action. Fishing, taking off, flying, landing.
Sometimes I can't pick a favorite. Which do you like best?
I went with some friends to one of Collier County's conservation areas in Immokalee.
Much of the preserve is open fields and meadows with scattered palms and palmettos.
A massive 1999 tile mural by Barbara Jo Revelle is in a small courtyard, on one wall of the federal courthouse at the west end of First Street. The mural incorporates old photographs of Black solders in the Civil War who defended the fort for which the city is named from Confederate attacks.
When I walked past, it looked very quiet.
If you look close, you will see a couple more Carmona sculptures in front.
Here is the art center in Fort Myers that was mentioned in yesterday's post.
The sculpture I showed yesterday is in the center. The two big brown cylinders beyond are the Caloosahatchee Manuscripts, brilliant sculptures that are amazing at night. I encourage you to click on this link to see a post about them from almost exactly two years ago, in that pre-pandemic world.
A mural by Simone Eisenbeiss is being painted on the black wall of the Franklin Shops next to an empty lot on Fort Myers' main street. It will be wonderful when it is finished.
The mural illustrates a variety of Florida wildlife that are facing differing levels of stresses and threats, namely, an alligator, a bald eagle, a Florida panther, a sea turtle, a seal, a manatee and a bee.
Linked to Monday Murals.
The Franklin Shops occupy a two story building on First Street, Fort Myers' main street.
It has many booths rented by a variety of artists and vendors, most with a colorful, funky vibe.
I liked this Klimt-like door to a women's changing room, next to a print by Daniela Martinez.
Want a hat?
A second floor section offered art and craft items organized under signs reading "You Need Art."
Personally, I am quite conventional, but I have an odd love of funky.