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.

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.

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.
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






A bunch of cool American semi tractors all lined up side by side. (Think old Peterbilts and similar). This was Germany in the 80’s so a semi with a long nose was something you never saw in real life.
I had a poster of the Ford GT90 that I picked up at the Detroit Auto Show.
I went through old copies of National Geographic, cut out all the ads for Toyota 4x4s, and taped them together into a poster for my wall!
I had the 1980’s Porsche 911, photographed from behind, jumping a couple inched off the ground (the Seinfeld one). It had sticker license plate that had my last name on it. I loved that poster!
I had 3 larger posters on my wall that I stared at while I lay in bed.
930 Flachbau, in white
911 Turbo with the “whale tail”, side profile in metallic orange
Lamborghini Countach, side profile in silver
Ferrari F40
Fiat X1/ 9 and Alfa Romeo GTV6
190E Cosworth, then Colin McRae/Subie 555 WRX in the air, of course
Trabant. Being eaten by a goat.
Mercedes W210. Sounds boring. But the Slogan “Sehen Sie Mercedes mit anderen Augen” (or similar…) got me as a kid. Always loved the design and still would love to have one.
A Mercedes C111 and a 300 SEL 6.3 on the wall of the test track. Both were given to me by a friend of German heritage upon his return from a vacation trip to Germany.
A poster of Jacky Ickx’s F1 Ferrari 312 in action. Also, a cut-from-a-magazine ad for the original Porsche 911 Targa.
I hit 7th grade in the Chaparral 2, Lola T70, Cobra Daytona, Ford GT40/Mk2, Porsche 906, Ferrari 330P2, and F1 Gurney Eagle days, so I pretty much had all of them and more as posters plastered in various places it was allowed.
I had a Hummer H2 poster up in my classroom when that car was new.
Countach! One of those really big long posters. And yes, I realize I’m really showing my age.
You and me both. Also a Testarossa and Aston Martin Vantage.
And an Iron Maiden “Killers” poster.
Not a poster but a full-page ad that I tore out of a discarded large-format magazine (Life, I think?) and put up on the wall over my desk at home during my high school years which would make it the very late 70s & early 80s. The ad showed a scene set on a wharf or pier on a foggy day prominently featuring an old AC Cobra with a steamer trunk strapped to the luggage rack on its trunk lid while someone in a cableknit turtleneck sweater, presumably the AC’s driver, is standing and chatting with some people sitting at a sidewalk cafe table. Really dug that car… plus the premise of embarking on bona fide journeys with that steamer trunk strapped to the luggage rack was mighty appealing.
Alas, I have since lost that picture and I do not even remember what product the ad was ostensibly advertising, lol. Might have been some liquor like a whiskey of some kind or even a brand of beer? Most certainly not tobacco, though, as I detested and abhorred anything to do with smoking. Not the case with booze, lol.
Does any of that ring any bells for anyone here? Sporadic online searches have turned up nothing and an inquiry to a friend with connections to the local Cobra club likewise turned up nothing (possible that since the Cobra club was more concerned with the Ford-era Cobras & replicas than the older AC models they weren’t familiar with the ad in question; I’m assuming it was indeed an older AC but this was years before I became better versed in things automotive…)
I never had car posters (I shared a room with my brother until I was 15, the room was small, and the bunkbeds/dressers covered a lot of wall space you get the idea, plus you know, couldn’t just not have an Incubus poster at the time) but I always had your typical exotic car wall calendars up. And the month the Viper appeared would often last multiple months.
I used to grab a bunch at the motor show every year, so it was always a mixture of reasonably attainable cars. One was a bright yellow Holden Monaro (the “new” one from the early 2000s), which was signed by some V8 Supercars driver or other – I had no idea who he was, I just wanted a poster! It had the iconic tagline, “Monaro is back. Game over.” Which I always liked.
To balance things out in the Holden vs Ford stakes, I also had a BA XR8 Falcon in orange. Then there was the Lancer Evo…. VIII I think? Maybe IX, in fully rally garb. Finally I recall having a poster of a Range Rover Evoque for some reason. I was never particularly interested in the car but hey, it was a free poster.
side view of a white Lamborghini Countach and the cheap 4-piece plastic frame from Shopko kept falling off
A large framed poster of the rear of a white Lamborghini Countach, a poster of a Red Sn95 Mustang GT (I think a 94/95?) and a blue with white stripes Viper GTS. I think I also had a Testarossa poster, but I can’t really remember now.
C4 Chevrolet Corvette
Well it was many posters. Maybe it was an 80s and 90s thing, you know cover up bleh white walls. Anyhow… Best I recall were… David Kimball Corvette ZR1 cutaway poster, red Ferrari F40 poster sortof in a sunset scene, Lambo Countach black, Audi Quattro S1 in a rally jumping, Porsche 959 silver side profile, Jaguar XJ220 3/4 view, few planes one specially Avigraphica Boeing 747-400 cutaway.
Damn. Nice collection of posters.
I didn’t really have posters, the Lotus III poster (from the game) with a Lotus M100, an early rendition of the FWD Elan may be closest.
However I did have 1:18 models, an 80’s Countach and my favourite, Ferrari 288GTO.
Somehow the collection included a Volvo 740 wagon, not sure how but it was equally part of it.
As I grew up the last entrant was an early Lotus Elise
1967 Corvette 427 coupe in Goodwood green metallic with Saddle color interior.
I had a 300zx cutaway, and a Testarossa. I definitely preferred the Z car over he Ferrari.