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Last week, the new Lexus RZ 450e and BMW M760e were unveiled and while the duo don’t have much in common, one thing they do share are optional two-tone paint schemes. That got us thinking, are ...
In the 1950s and ’60s, two-tone paint schemes were a common sight on everything from family station wagons to muscle cars. According to a report by Automotive News, that trend is on its way back ...
Triumph launched 12 new paint schemes with high-impact flashes of color for the 2026 model year, which are available in ...
The study didn't collect data for two-tone paint schemes, but it's safe to assume that new two-tone cars make up only the very tiniest proportion of registrations.
But two-tone — and even three-tone — paint combinations for mainstream cars peaked in the middle of the last century and pretty much bit the dust, along with muscle cars and mammoth V-8s, by ...
Two-tone paint schemes have become extremely common in the car market. It's not just Mini doing contrasting roofs anymore. Now everything from a Chevy Equinox EV to a Toyota Corolla Cross Hybrid ...
Listen very carefully, everyone: two-tone paint jobs look terrible. Your car should be only one color. As we close out another edition of the annual tuner-focused SEMA show — which this year ...
Two-tone paint jobs are associated with the 1950s, when pastels were popular and the boomerang-shaped designs of the era and chrome striping were on full display on the sides of cars.
While red may have a rich history of being the go-to paint choice for Ferrari, it also has a history of two-tone liveries. For example, the 1957 250 GT that won the 2009 Villa d'Este and the 2010 ...
Throughout its colorful history, it remained in an understated two-tone silver and grey paint scheme. Buick Special '57. Roland Magnusson/Getty Images.