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Even the lowly Ford Fiesta came in a Ghia Edition. There’s cruise-control, of course (an unusual option in 1981), and the “leather” horn button has luxurious molded-in “stitching” for ...
The GT70 Ghia Concept was born out of Ford's frustration with rally race performance in 1970, though it never made it to corporate approval.
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American Cars and Racing on MSNSomeone Just Paid $180,000 For This Rare Italian Ford MustangIt’s a pretty pony car. A unique classic Ford Mustang modified by Italian design house Zagato that was listed for ...
The Ford Mustang II Ghia we're looking at today is from the same year — 1977 — as Friday's Toyota, but it appears to be all stock and original. That's an important factor because it's also ...
The placard denoted the car in question was a 1982 Ghia Brezza, painted red and riding on sweet four-spoke phone-dial wheels. My dad, who was along for the trip, immediately called out how similar ...
This Ford Orion 1.6 Ghia has not seen the light of day in over 20 years. It has been sitting in a garage since the 2000s. The one who unbolts the doors of the garage has never owned it because he ...
The historic Ford’s owners hope the car can be restored, but it’s a long shot for a one-of-one concept that’s 45 years old. The Ford Ghia Probe I was the first in a series of Probe concepts ...
A 1979 Ford Ghia Probe 1 concept car appeared destroyed inside a burned-out trailer on the Munras Avenue offramp from state Highway 1 in Monterey, August 18, 2024. Monterey Fire Department ...
But not this one. A 1977 Ford Capri MKII 3.0. Ghia has become somewhat of a viral star after an ad for it was posted on eBay, out of Cumbria, England.
Bring a Trailer Bring a Trailer Ghia once made some of the wildest wheeled vehicles around. Before the Via, the company built such oddities as the Ford Probe I and Isuzu Bellett MX1600.
In the late 1970s, Ford worked with Ghia to design a handful of Probe concepts. The cars had striking, futuristic bodywork and enough '80s tech to make E.T.
Ford unveiled the Probe I at the Frankfurt Motor Show in 1979. It was designed and built by the Ghia design house in Turin, Italy, and sported a slippery aerodynamic shape to boost fuel efficiency.
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