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Ian Stuart Callum CBE FRSE RDI (born 30 July 1954) is a British car designer who has worked for Ford, TWR, and Aston Martin. In 1999 he became the Director of Design for Jaguar Cars, later Jaguar Land Rover, a position he held until mid 2019. In 2019, Callum founded his own eponymously named automotive and product design company, Callum.
In September 2019, Ian Callum Design (the company started by Ian Callum, the designer of the first generation Vanquish) publicly revealed the Vanquish 25. It is a restoration package for the first generation Vanquish to "make the Vanquish the Grand Tourer for the 2020s". Only 25 cars will be made by British company R-Reforged.
Designed by Ian Callum and Giles Taylor the concept previewed the Jaguar XK [1] which was subsequently launched at the autumn 2005 Frankfurt Motor Show. [2] The designers sought their inspiration from famous Jaguar automobiles of the past when designing the car, with the E-Type being the main inspiration as the grille of the ALC paid homage to ...
The Callum Skye is a luxury £100,000 EV from the former design director of Jaguar, Ian Callum. ... is intended as a car used primarily on the public road. Described as a 2+2, the Callum Skye has ...
[12] [13] [c] It was the only Aston Martin that incorporated a steel monocoque construction, which was designed by Jaguar—a company that Ford also owned at the time. [15] Designed by Ian Callum, the DB7 was available as both a coupe and convertible, the latter known as the Volante.
The second generation of the XK debuted in 2005 at the Frankfurt Motor Show in Germany, styled by Jaguar's chief designer Ian Callum. [6] The X150's grille was designed to recall the 1961 E-Type. The XK is an evolution of the Advanced Lightweight Coupé (ALC) introduced at the 2005 North American International Auto Show.
However an official photo taken by Jaguar shows only 6 cars to exist. [16] Kaaimans International (who are selling one of the cars), says only 4 stunt cars had been produced. [17] Furthermore, this is an agreed upon number by the car's designer, Ian Callum, in a two part article where he states four were built specifically for the film. [18]
It updates the time-traveling car from "Back to the Future," the DeLorean DMC-12, which suffered a short, doomed life. It was created by maverick GM exec John Z. DeLorean, who ventured out on his ...