#big daddy roth
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Who wore it better Nick Cave or Pharmakon.
T shirt by Ed "Big Daddy" Roth
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Always loved Rat Fink growing up as a kid
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Pete Millar “Battman With Ribbon The Wonder” Big Daddy Roth #1 (Oct./Nov. 1964) Source
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The Orbitron
The Orbitron is a custom car built by Ed Roth and feared lost until its rediscovery in Mexico in 2007
A second generation to Roth's original Beatnik Bandit, which was built in 1960, the Beatnik Bandit II features a one-of-a-kind fiberglass body with PPG lemon meringue pie paint, stylized Rat Fink designs on the sides, and chrome by Metal Masters of Salt Lake City, UT.
Beatnik Bandit II includes many unique design features, including an electronic console which operates the digital instrument panel and other features such as a digital readout of the car's latitude and longitude.
The lack of a rearview mirror is not a problem on this car. A "TV mirror" video monitor is mounted on the console with the actual camera mounted in the rear panel. The bubble top is also lifted electronically.
Beatnik Bandit II was built entirely by Roth, who credits "Revelations from Father in Heaven" for his achievement. The car has been shown in major U. S. cities, including Boston, Los Angeles, Chicago and Houston, as well as in Yokohama, Japan.
The Beatnik Bandit
Ed 'Big Daddy' Roth was an artist, cartoonist, illustrator, pinstriper and custom car designer and builder who created the hot-rod icon Rat Fink and other characters. Roth was a key figure in Southern California's Kustom Kulture and hot-rod movement of the late 1950s and 1960s The Beatnik Bandit was one of his first creations from the early 1960s. It was built from a 1949 Oldsmobile, the chassis was shortened 5 feet, the Olds engine was given the classic hotrod look with GMC blower and twin carbys, everything was chromed except the blower belt. The white interior featured single joystick, that operated turning, throttle and braking. The bubble top was created using compressed air to inflate a sheet of plastic into a dome in a pizza oven. On display at the National Automobile Museum in Reno
Mysterion
Ed Roth built the Mysterion in 1963, he got the idea from the multi engine dragsters he had seen at the dragstrips. He combined two Ford engines, two transmissions, plus two welded rear ends for the foundation. It featured an offset headlight and the typical Ed Roth bubble top. On display at Galpin Auto Sports.
The Road Agent by Ed “Big Daddy” Roth.
Mysterion
Custom builder and artist Ed "Big Daddy" Roth completed the Mysterion in 1963. The bubbletopped custom featured a completely original fiberglass body and twin Ford big-block engines. The weight of the engines was too much for the frame to bear, and the Mysterion fell apart. Tribute versions have been built, including this precise replica from Galpin Auto Sports.
The Surfink
The Surfink, created by Mark Glaz as a tribute to Ed Roth and Ratfink, features a large Ratfink figure atop a surfboard complete with a blown V-8 engine.
The Orbitron
Built in 1964, the vehicle was powered by a 1955 or 1956 Chevrolet V8 and was backed by a Powerglide automatic transmission. The body was hand-laid fiberglass, hiding Roth's extensive chrome work to the chassis. The cockpit, set at the extreme rear of the vehicle in the manner of a dragster, was lined with fake fur and featured an 11-inch General Electric "1-Touch" portable television inserted in the console. Topping the cockpit was a custom-made, hydraulically operated Plexiglas bubble top. One of a series of ordinary doorbell push-button switches atop the hood activated the top from the outside.
Other mechanical features included a 1956 Chevrolet rear end, dropped Ford front axle beam, Buickbrake drums and early Ford brakes. The frame was handmade of rectangular 2x4 inch steel tubing. The engine was a leftover from one of Roth's 1955 Chevrolets, having been removed to make way for a then-new Mark IV big-block given to him by General Motors. It was one of the very few completed cars Roth deemed to be a "mistake" because he felt the car did not show well since the heavily chromed engine and most of the chassis were hidden. The Orbitron was, in fact, one of his few customs to have a hood. Reportedly, the hydraulically operated hood did not fit well due to rushed fiberglass work.
The vehicle's most distinctive feature was its asymmetrical front end with red, green and blue tinted headlamps. It was thought that the three beams when combined would produce an intense white light; the idea came from the then-new medium of color television.
By Jerry Thompson - originally posted to Flickr as 2C7O4069, CC BY 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=5973582
By Jerry Thompson - originally posted to Flickr as 2C7O4066, CC BY 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=5973591
The Baja Bandeeto
Custom car builder and renowned painter Fritz ‘Spritz By Fritz‘ Schenck recreated with his bubble top roadster; the Baja Bandeeto.
#The Orbitron#car#cars#Beatnik Bandit II#ed roth#rat fink#The Beatnik Bandit#Beatnik Bandit#Ed 'Big Daddy' Roth#big daddy roth#big daddy#mysterion#The Road Agent#The Surfink#Surfink#The Baja Bandeeto#Fritz Schenck
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Into the Valley of Finks and Weirdos, Todd Schorr, 2002
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Frankie Issue #11 (Jun - Jul 2006) - Kitten clothing brand x Big Daddy Roth
The indie sleaze era features a lot of photographs that are created to seem heavily accidental, unserious and with lots of harsh lighting. Very easy to emulate back then and now.
#frankie magazine#kitten clothing brand#kitten clothing#big daddy roth#indie sleaze#indie sleaze photography
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Advertising art (and many of the shirt designs) by the great Robert Williams.
Car Craft November 1967
#1967#robert williams#big daddy roth#tshirt#hot rod#automotive#vintage ad#advertising#advertisement#vintage ads#1960s#1960s ad#1960's#1960's ad#funny#humor#humour
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DL and Odious are biking into trouble.
#dl and odious#ellis goodson#comics#comic books#indy comics#wip#weird-ohs#marx toys#big daddy roth#ratfink#nutty mads
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60s cutie in front of Ed "big daddy" Roth's Road Agent.
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1960s Rat Fink Bubble Gum Advertisement by Vinnie DeVille Via Flickr: Vintage advertisement for Rat Fink Bubble Gum from the early 1960s. Great mid-century graphics. Love the Pied Piper theme. I think I see two copyright lawsuits going on here - Ed “Big Daddy” Roth for the Rat Fink, and Walt Disney for the Mickey Mouse look-a-like. It’s always a thrill when it’s from Vinnie DeVille!
#Vintage Advertising#Vintage Graphics#Vintage Illustration#Mid-Century Illustration#1960s#Vintage Candy#Bubble Gum#Rat Fink#Ed Roth#Big Daddy Roth#Walt Disney#Mickey Mouse#Cooyright Infringement#Pied Piper#flickr
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Big Daddy and Annette
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Big Daddy Roth
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▶️ Big Daddy Roth #3 (1965)
Source: Internet Archive
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