Concorso Italiano, California's annual celebration of all things red, white and green, drew a fantastic array of machinery of all shapes and sizes to the Laguna Seca Golf Ranch today.
The modern supercar contingent continues to grow at this huge event, but there were still some mouth-watering rarities to keep the crowds interested, such as the beautiful 1953 Siata Daina of Cheryl and Thomas Creedon (above).
Perhaps the most impressive display, however, was put on to mark the 50th anniversary of the Intermeccanica-built Apollo. Not the biggest turnout by any means, but the 18 cars represented a fifth of total production and is thought to be the largest-ever gathering of the marque.
The original prototype was present (above), along with creator Milt Brown, designer Ron Plescia and sales manager George Finlay - who still owns a rare convertible. But drawing the most attention was John Barron's mint yellow 5000GT, the 'Thorndyke Special' as driven by David Tomlinson's villain in the Herbie movie The Love Bug.
"I've wanted one since I read about them in the ’60s," said Barron. "Max Balchowski staged the race scenes and prepped the cars for filming. There are several modifications to the chassis and suspension. I was looking at a convertible but couldn't get the numbers to work, then I saw this on eBay and I was the only one brave enough to bid. It needed a full restoration and I did 80% of it myself.