Home » What Car Poster Was On Your Childhood Bedroom Wall?

What Car Poster Was On Your Childhood Bedroom Wall?

Aa Car Poster
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Before video games and social media and TiVo-ing “Top Gear”, there were only really two ways of seeing your dream car every day. The first was to buy and keep a magazine. The second was a single piece of print. Although many of us rarely saw real Lamborghinis and Ferraris and whatnot often while growing up, we did put them on our walls, where they served as a gateway drug of sorts. The ubiquity of the term “poster car” proves how impactful a sheet of paper can be. Today on Autopian Asks, I want to know what car poster was on your childhood bedroom wall, because they’re often fond early memories of our enthusiasm.

While I did grow up right as gated manuals gave way to single-clutch automated transmissions, the iconic poster car for me was something older. An ’80s archetype, a pure object of speed and greed. We’re talking about a Guards Red Porsche 930 Turbo, but not just any 930 Turbo. Oh no, that simply wouldn’t be excessive enough. Instead, it’s a 930 Flachbau, a pinch of 935 inspiration for the road. To boldly bend a rule around fender flares, Porsche once lopped off the doe-eyed 911 headlights in favor of a wedge-shaped front in the pursuit of pure endurance racing pace. These flat-nose 930s quickly became so dominant that people wanted a little bit of their magic for the road. Thus, the Flachbau was born.

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Aa Porsche Poster 1
Photo credit: Thomas Hundal

Then, because nothing says excess quite like inappropriate use, it was possible to pair these racing aesthetics with the decidedly touring-focused configuration of a cabriolet. Keep in mind, the 911 had been around for dog’s years even in the ’80s, and the cabriolet had about the same torsional rigidity of damp vermicelli. Still, put all this together and you have a want-one car. The sort of thing that normally makes you want to work a bit harder in school so you can get into a good college and get a good job. Adverse side effects include attempting to make a living out of car writing, who knew?

That 930 Flachbau poster cemented a fascination with this strange little company from Stuttgart while expressing a love for sports cars in general. Whether a humble MGB, a brutally effective Consulier GTP, or a Jano-engined Ferrari 335 S, cars meant for driving rather than mere commuting have always been close to my heart. However, childhood always has to end, which meant I had to say goodbye to my beloved 930 Flachbau poster. More of a framed print than a poster, its likelihood of surviving an upcoming move was dubious. The frame was starting to give up and the glass could indeed shatter in transit, so off to Goodwill it went. While I kept watch for similar prints on eBay, I’d essentially given up on having this poster again.

Aa Porsche Poster 2
Photo credit: Thomas Hundal

That is, until Yuri Tereshyn of The Straight Pipes posted on his Instagram story about moving some car art on. I couldn’t believe it. There, among other posters including one of a Callaway Corvette, sat the print I imagined whenever someone said “Porsche Turbo.” Since the Greater Toronto Area automotive universe is surprisingly small, picking up the print was only a matter of taking a jaunt across town. The most memorable car poster on my childhood bedroom wall is effectively now on display in my grown-up apartment, and I reckon younger me would find that pretty cool.

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So, what car poster did you put on your childhood bedroom wall? Was it a Ferrari from the Scholastic book fair, the famous “Justification for a Higher Education”, or something else? As ever, let me know in the comments below.

Top graphic image: Thomas Hundal

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SlowBrownWagon
Member
SlowBrownWagon
1 month ago

Back in the day we had Junior High (now Middle School), we’d have to sell candy bars door to door as a fundraiser and you got prizes for how many you sold. Including magazine subscriptions. Fascinated by cars since memory, I got the Hot Rod subscription about when I turned 14.

I’d just take out the pics of the cars I liked and had them in a fresh rotation over my simulated wood paneling. Any split bumper Camaro was a permanent fixture.

I distinctly remember wondering why they couldn’t make any wedge shaped sexy Italian-style cars for less than the price of a house, it doesnt have to be stupid fast. Then the center-page ad for the Fiero came out, that had a prominent place for a while.

Otherwise Dalls Cowboys Cheerleaders, Kiss, and Marilyn Monroe.

Interstingto think what those mags would be worth unmolested but they wouldn’t have survived anyway. I got my money’s worth!

Commercial Cook
Commercial Cook
1 month ago

I had a few but surprisingly vividly I remember Eighth generation Civic which to me to this day looks like a car that could have been made today. it was so dramatically different from 7th gen

Mark Tucker
Mark Tucker
1 month ago

The classic silver 959 parked on black river rock, with neon stripes in the background. I think everyone who went to an auto show in 1986 walked out with one. That was on one wall, and a cutaway of the Space Shuttle and the box lid from my Tamiya Blackfoot were on the other wall.

Revolver
Revolver
1 month ago

My parents framed a 959 poster up in my room since before I was born, so I’m in that same “purposeful engineering” club. I didn’t even realize it was a 959 until decades later, and soon after my mom got her 996 C4S, so that’s a dream for them accomplished. I’m glad you were so physically able to take a piece of your childhood with you again.

I also had a picture of a green Gumpert Apollo outrunning a tornado that someone had massaged a lot in Photoshop, but it was in more of a “pics that go hard” way, I knew nothing of the car and in the end I found the real Apollo to be a little ugly. I got it for the crazy idea *of* outrunning a tornado in a sports car.

Thxcolm
Thxcolm
1 month ago

I’ve had this poster (link for reference) since I was probably 10 (now late 40’s). It’s moved with me from bedroom to my home office.

https://ontime.mecum.com/auction/157/item/1948-1983-porsche-thoroughbreds-from-zuffenhausen-auto-quarterly-poster-19846/

JCat
Member
JCat
1 month ago

I didn’t have a lot of “poster car” posters. The most memorable one was George Washington with a Challenger SRT8.

Revolver
Revolver
1 month ago
Reply to  JCat

I still love the utterly silly premise of taking a bunch of reenactors and your new muscle car and seeing just how far you can take the joke. Corporations tend to be monolithic and faceless these days, it’s nice to remember back when even if they did want your money, there were people behind it giving the ad agency special touch to spin a silly, clearly workshopped idea.

It also helps that I love Chrysler no matter how garbage they objectively are. It’s like if Ford actually tried. And failed hard. But kept trying.

UnseenCat
UnseenCat
1 month ago

My father was getting rid of some framed prints and I rescued them… The one I remember most was a Ferrari 250 GTO on the track with Phil Hill at the wheel. This was around the time when the Countach posters were probably at their height of popularity.

Jakob K's Garage
Jakob K's Garage
1 month ago

1932 Ford V8 actually 😉

Butterfingerz
Butterfingerz
1 month ago

I had a Hot Rod magazine centerfold of CadZZilla and a “Squeaky Clean” poster of a Pantera being washed by a lovely bikini clad lady that I won at a carnival.

LTDScott
Member
LTDScott
1 month ago

I got a Ferrari F40 poster at a book fair in elementary school and got it laminated and it was on my wall for many years. When my mom moved out of my childhood home a few years back, she still had it, and now so do I.

I also had posters of weird cars like a Shelby Dakota and a Lumina Euro, and my odd taste in cars continues to this day.

MaximillianMeen
Member
MaximillianMeen
1 month ago

I had the Rick McBride “Decisions, Decisions” Ferrari 308 poster.

Keith Tanner
Keith Tanner
1 month ago

I remember seeing the ads for those in R&T. Not sure my parents would have gone for it, but they sure were memorable. Almost formative.

Steven M
Steven M
1 month ago

The one I had was ‘Decisions, Decisions, Decisions’ with a Countach, a 328 and an 959.

Henrik Hieta
Henrik Hieta
1 month ago

White Lamborghini Countach.

John DeSimone
Member
John DeSimone
1 month ago

K.I.T.T.
I’m old

Arch Duke Maxyenko
Member
Arch Duke Maxyenko
1 month ago

I had a Prowler poster, believe it was a black and white poster with the smoke/fog around the car.

Also had one of the light-up pictures of the Eleanor Mustangs where the headlights were LEDs

Lockleaf
Lockleaf
1 month ago

I had dragon paintings by Ciruelo Cabral and maps from fantasy worlds like LOTR and Wheel of Time. I didn’t get any interest in cars until i was almost 18.

Matthew ONeill
Member
Matthew ONeill
1 month ago

I didn’t, but I remember my friend having an 80’s Camaro IROC poster.

RKranc
Member
RKranc
1 month ago

I came to car enthusiasm late (last year of college or thereabouts), but as a young aviation fan I had posters of the SR-71 Blackbird and the A-10 Warthog on the walls of my childhood bedroom instead.

Autonerdery
Member
Autonerdery
1 month ago

Chevrolet Corvair 1960-1969,” put out by Automobile Quarterly. It’s still hanging, framed, in my garage.

Last edited 1 month ago by Autonerdery
Joshua Christian
Joshua Christian
1 month ago

Volkswagen ID.R! I was visiting family in India for the summer and picked up a copy of the newest Overdrive magazine. The ID.R had just set its Nurburgring record, and Overdrive made a poster to celebrate.

Last edited 1 month ago by Joshua Christian
Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
1 month ago

I don’t remember any car posters being around when I was I was a kid. I’m not sure the printing press had been invented yet.

Urban Runabout
Member
Urban Runabout
1 month ago
Reply to  Canopysaurus

Just the Guttenburg Bible for you then.

Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
1 month ago
Reply to  Urban Runabout

Yeah, and that doesn’t have any cars unless you count Ezekiel’s Chariot.

Urban Runabout
Member
Urban Runabout
1 month ago
Reply to  Canopysaurus

But … What about Genesis? The Judge? And Corinthian Leather?

Y2Keith
Member
Y2Keith
1 month ago
Reply to  Urban Runabout

Or the Police Academy script.

Rippstik
Rippstik
1 month ago

I went to local dealerships and grabbed many brochures. I would then tear them apart and hang the pics on the wall.

So… normal ass traffic? I 100% had a Dodge Caliber on my wall at one point.

Last edited 1 month ago by Rippstik
Abdominal Snoman
Member
Abdominal Snoman
1 month ago

A Pantera. I honestly don’t remember why, I think it was one of those 4 page fold out things in a magazine and 10 year old me thought it looked cool.

*Jason*
*Jason*
1 month ago

Ferrari Testarossa

Keith Tanner
Keith Tanner
1 month ago

Body by Lamborghini, High Fidelity by Alpine.
https://www.slowcarfast.com/gallery/images/misc/s-l1600.jpg

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