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In
1960 I had a shop in Burbank, California with about 5 employees
doing custom auto and boat upholstery. No request seemed unusual
at the time, from suede leather headlining to diamond tufted
rumble seats. One day a group of Lockheed engineers brought
me a ragged piece of canvas with sewn-in wooden slats, rubber
bands, crude hooks and other miscellaneous innovations. They
asked if I would be interested in making about a dozen of
these and I remember saying "What the hell is it, a chastity
belt for Godzilla ?" They replied that it was a protective
cover used by the Porsche factory for road testing new cars
and on unofficial loan to them.
I
accepted the challenge and completely redesigned the German
cover, spending about as much time road testing as sewing.
After about six weeks and a small mountain of scrap material
we finished 12 covers. Within a week the Lockheed engineers
were back asking for 50 more covers. We made a total of about
150 covers at that time, all for Porsche 356 models, until
I had to discontinue the project because of an overload of
upholstery work.
I
relocated to Newport Beach, California10 years later where
some enthusiastic Porsche friends asked me if I would make
a version of the cover for the 911 series. I designed a 911
version from memory upgrading the older 356 covers. I also
placed a small ad in Road & Track using the German description
of the covers "Steinschlagshutzshulle". Dissected the word
means, stone/strike/shield and for short I tagged it "Bra".
"Bra" is the name I adopted from the beginning and Road &
Track is where I tested the waters as a mail order business.
In view of this I feel justified in making the claim as the
originator of the "Bra" since there isn't a trace of similarity
to that original pile of canvas to what is now known as a
"Bra".
For
the first couple of years the only covers I made were for
Porsche vehicles. As orders gradually increased I decided
to go into other makes. It seemed to me, in view of the enthusiasm
for the newly introduced Datsun 240-Z that I couldn't miss
with this addition. But I found out differently. Acceptance
by Z-owners was not immediate nor were sales for other makes.
In 1973 I applied for a $3,000 loan. When I said that I wanted
the money for material to make car bras, all I could see were
the soles of the banker's shoes as he went over backwards.
It was about 5 years, around 1975, that the bra began to show
signs of interest for anyone other than Porsche owners. Soon
it became obvious that those funny looking things were starting
to sell and I was no longer the only one making bras. Now
of course anyone with a sewing machine and a pepper tree to
set up under is into the act. Today most people know what
a bra is but I only wish some of these late-comers could have
been there in the early days when only a handful of Porsche
enthusiasts knew what a car bra was.
Our
cover is still the standard used for reference by all of those
who have entered the business in the last few years. To bear
out this statement, there isn't a cover on the market that
hasn't copied parts or all of the Colgan Custom Bra.
Bill
Colgan - 1988
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