Raymond Loewy
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Image:PRR-S1-Loewy.jpg Raymond Loewy (November 5, 1893 - July 14, 1986) is one of the best known industrial designers of the 20th Century. Born in France, Loewy spent most of his professional career in the United States, where he influenced countless aspects of American life.
Loewy married Jean Thomson in 1931; the marriage would last until 1945. He became a U.S. citizen in 1938. His second marriage, to Viola Erickson, took place in 1948.
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Early life
Raymond Loewy was born in Paris and raised in France. An early accomplishment was the design of a successful model aircraft that won the James Gordon Bennett Cup in 1908; by the following year, he was selling the plane, named the Ayrel. He served in the French Army during World War I. He left for the United States in 1919.
Early work
Image:Hooverlogo.png In Loewy's early years in the US, he lived in New York and found work as a window designer for department stores, including Macy's, in addition to working as a fashion illustrator for Vogue and Harper's Bazaar. In 1929, he received his first industrial design commission; to modernize the appearance of a duplicating machine by Gestetner. Further commissions followed, including work for Westinghouse, for the Hupp Motor Works (the Hupmobile styling), and the styling of the Coldspot refrigerator for Sears-Roebuck. His design firm opened a London office in the mid 1930s.
Pennsylvania Railroad
In 1937, Loewy established a relationship with the Pennsylvania Railroad, for which his most notable designs were the streamlined styling of the railroad's passenger locomotives. Loewy designed a streamlined shroud for K4s Pacific #3768 to haul the newly redesigned (by Loewy) 1938 Broadway Limited. He followed this by styling the experimental S1 locomotive, and the T1 class. Later, at the PRR's request, he restyled Baldwin's diesel locomotives, giving them a distinctive "sharknose" snout reminiscent of the T1.
While Loewy did not design the shape of the railroad's famous GG1 electric locomotives, he improved their looks by recommending welded and smoothed, rather than riveted, construction, and a pin-striped paint scheme to highlight their smoothly rounded forms.
As well as such glamorous projects, Loewy's studios did all manner of work for the PRR, including designing the interiors of passenger cars, stations, printed material, and much more.
Studebaker
Image:Studebakerlogo1940s.gif Raymond Loewy began his long and productive relationship with U.S. automaker Studebaker Corporation of South bend, Indiana in the 1930s. Loewy and Associates was contracted by Studebaker to provide design services for the independent automaker during the waning years of the Great Depression. Loewy's designs first began appearing on late 1930s model Studebakers. Studebaker also adopted Loewy's clean, uncluttered logo design, replacing the logo that Studebaker had used since the turn of the century.
During World War II, government restrictions on in-house design departments at Ford, General Motors and Chrysler prevented official work on civilian automobiles. Because Loewy's firm was independent of the nation’s fourth largest automobile producer, no such restrictions applied. This permitted Studebaker to launch the first all new postwar automobile design in 1947; a full two years ahead General Motors, Chrysler and Ford could launch their first modern car designs. Loewy's team developed an advanced design, featuring flush front fenders, and clean rearward lines. Loewy's team also created the Starlight body style featuring a rear window system that wrapped 180 degrees around the rear seat passengers. Image:1953 Studebaker Commander.jpg In addition to the iconic bullet nosed Studebaker's of 1950 and 1951, Loewy and his design team also created the 1953 Studebaker line, highlighted by the Starliner and Starlight coupes, which consistently rank as one of the best designed automobiles of the 1950s in lists compiled by Collectible Automobile, Car and Driver and Motor Trend magazines. Lowey also modernized Studebaker’s logo again by retaining the “Lazy S” element, but applying it to a more modern design.
Loewy's final commission of the 1950s for Studebaker was the transformation of the Starlight and Starliner coupes into the Studebaker Hawk series for the 1956 model year.
Lowey was called back to Studebaker by the firm's President, Sherwood Egbert, to design the Avanti, from the Italian word for "forward." In the spring of 1961, Sherwood Egbert, the new president of Studebaker, hired Raymond Loewy to help energize Studebaker's soon-to-be released line of 1963 passenger cars to attract younger buyers. Loewy agreed to take the job, despite the short 40-day schedule allowed to produce a finished design and scale model. Image:Studebaker Avanti.jpg Loewy quickly recruited a design team consisting of experienced designers and former Loewy employees, John Ebstein and Bob Andrews, as well as a young student from Art Center named Tom Kellogg. The team gathered in Palm Springs and sequestered themselves in a house leased solely for the purpose of developing the new car design. Each team member had a role: Andrews and Kellogg handled the sketching, Ebstein oversaw the project, and Loewy served as the creative director, offering input on the design.
Once the Avanti hit the market, it became an instant classic and still has many devotees even today. The car has been produced in limited quantities over the years by a succession of small independent companies.
Loewy Designs
- Air Force One (blue, white, & chrome livery)
- Baldwin Locomotive Works Model DR-4-4-15 "Sharknose" diesel locomotives
- Coca-Cola Redesigned original contour bottle in 1955, eliminating Coca-Cola embossing & adding vivid white Coke & Coca-Cola lettering, designed & introduced first king-size or slenderized bottles, I.E. 10, 12, 16 and 26 oz., the same year. Designed the first Coke aluminum can with diamond design in 1960.
- Exxon logo
- Fairbanks-Morse "Erie-built" and "C-liner" models, Model H-10-44 and H-20-44, and early Model H-12-44, H-12-46, H-15-44, H-16-44, H-16-66, and H-24-66 diesel locomotives
- Farmall tractor
- Frigidaire refrigerators, ranges, and freezers
- Greyhound ScenicruiserImage:5542gli 4501card.jpg
- Hallicrafters Model S-38 shortwave radio
- Lucky Strike logo
- NASA's Skylab space station 1st interior design standards for space travel including a porthole to allow the 1st view of earth from space, interior designs & color schemes, a private area for each crew member to relax & sleep, food table and trays, coveralls, garment storage modules, designs for waste management
- New York City Transit Authority R40 car
- Pennsylvania Railroad:
- Postage stamp :
- Five cents John Kennedy, 1964
- Sears products, including 1935 Sears Coldspot
- Shell logo
- Studebaker
External links
- RaymondLoewy.com - official site by his estate
- The Raymond Loewy Foundation
- Design drawing for Exxon logo by Raymond Loewy - American Treasures of the Library of Congressfr:Raymond Loewy