Mga Logo Embroidered Hat - Mg on 2040-parts.com
San Tan Valley, Arizona, United States
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Hats & Caps for Sale
- Mki sprite script logo - bugeye - frogeye - embroidered hat(US $12.00)
- Sunbeam tiger embroidered hat(US $12.00)
- Nike golf/ mercedes benz, men's cap. new without tags.(US $23.00)
- Bridgestone tire multi-color cap hat-new(US $9.95)
- Bridgestone tire logo multi-color cap hat-new(US $9.95)
- Toyota racing development cap(US $15.99)
Ford Fiesta ST concept (2011) at the Frankfurt motor show
Tue, 13 Sep 2011This is the new Ford Fiesta ST, just unveiled at the 2011 Frankfurt motor show. It’s just a concet car for now, but we know a production version of the new Ford Fiesta ST will be revealed at the 2012 Geneva motor show, and that sales will start in the UK in time for next September’s plate change. It’s the same format Ford followed with the Focus ST, revealing a near-production concept at the 2010 Paris motor show, and then pulling the wraps off the real thing last night.
Jaguar C-X75 500bhp hybrid supercar - here by 2014
Tue, 24 Jul 2012Jaguar today confirmed it will bring a limited, 200-strong edition of the C-X75 hybrid supercar to market in the next two years. The C-X75 is being developed in partnership with Williams and will be the second British hybrid supercar – alongside McLaren's new P11 – to challenge the Ferrari Enzo successor and Porsche 918 e-sypercars. Jaguar C-X75: the latest news Coventry today confirmed to CAR that just 200 C-X75s will be built in a low production run.
Worth a read: Wired's 'Why Getting It Wrong Is the Future of Design'
Thu, 25 Sep 2014Wired has just published a series of short articles entitled 13 Lessons for Design's New Golden Age. While there are some interesting examples cited in the piece, the concluding article, ‘Why Getting It Wrong Is the Future of Design' by the former creative director of Wired magazine, Scott Dadich, feels like it has particular resonance for car design. Dadich's Wrong Theory uses disruptive examples from the world of art, plus his own experience of working at Wired, to explain how design goes through phases: establishing a direction, creating a set of rules that define that direction and finally someone who dares to break from that direction.