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 1959, when everything else was getting bigger and noisier, the Karmann Ghia stayed itself. Restrained. Purposeful. Elegant.
The convertible remained what it had been since 1957: a properly engineered cabriolet, not a coupe with its roof removed. The structural reinforcement was integral. The soft top mechanism was reliable. The body was tight.
Ghia's design continued to age in the right direction — toward timelessness rather than datedness. The shapes that had seemed unusual in 1955 were now recognized as correct. The market was catching up.

