What It Was
The Karmann Ghia never competed on horsepower or size. It competed on something more fundamental: the belief that how you design a car says something about who you are as a designer, and by extension, who you are as a driver. In 1957, when everything else was getting bigger and noisier, the Karmann Ghia stayed itself. Restrained. Purposeful. Elegant.
The convertible body was a Karmann coachbuilding achievement. Despite removing the structural roof, the car remained tight — no cowl shake, no body flex on uneven roads. Internal bracing handled what the roof had done, invisibly.
The soft top folded neatly behind the rear seats. When it was down, the lines of the car improved: the windshield read taller, the body more sculptural, the whole thing more clearly Italian. When it was up, it was a proper enclosed coupe.
