Introduction
When the 1964 Type 34 Karmann Ghia rolled off assembly lines in Osnabrück, it carried a design that had already proven its argument: that elegance didn't require curves. That proportion mattered more than ornamentation. That a car could be beautiful through geometry alone.
The Type 34 was the Karmann Ghia that Europe kept for itself. The Type 14 — rounder, softer, more immediately charming — was the export success, the car that conquered America. The Type 34's angular 'Razor Edge' design was the more sophisticated statement, the one that rewarded looking longer rather than looking first.
