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Spring color tour: No better place for cool liveries than the Indianapolis 500
Creative and eye-popping liveries part of the show at Indy 500
’Twas Mark Twain who said there is no such thing as a new idea. “We simply take a lot of old ideas and put them into a sort of mental kaleidoscope.”
Note the colors of the IndyCar rainbow: When the field lines up for the 100th Indianapolis 500 on May 29, the mix of red, blue and probably even once-considered-unlucky green will showcase the history and creativity of the color schemes. The goal: Make artwork out of machinery, make the cars as appealing to the cameras as to the eyes. Attract attention, highlight sponsors. Make liveries part of the show.
Indianapolis Motor Speedway has featured the orange models branded by STP, the splashy blue-and-gold Johnny Lightning Special that Al Unser won the 500 with in 1970 and ’71, the yellow Pennzoils reaching victory lane three times and all those iconic Marlboro schemes.
Because there are only so many ways to organize colors, it seems many of the best have been repeated. In this year’s race, Hélio Castroneves will use Pennzoil’s splendid all-yellow design for the second time (he also did in 2014) and Scott Dixon’s red Target car will have yellow lightning bolts similar to what Ganassi Racing used in winning four consecutive CART titles in the late 1990s and the 500 in 2000.
When Lotus returned to the IndyCar Series in 2012, its officials insisted on having a Jim Clark-inspired green-and-yellow car, and if it seems James Hinchcliffe’s UFD car in 2014 looked like another Canadian standout—both of Jacques Villeneuve’s entries, including the 500’s ’95 winner, were sponsored by Player’s Ltd.—that’s not a coincidence.
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