zzdcar
Home
/
Reviews
/
Culture
/
Taillight Trend Alert: The Technosquiggle
Taillight Trend Alert: The Technosquiggle-July 2024
2024-02-19 EST 22:12:17

Image for article titled Taillight Trend Alert: The Technosquiggle

Last night I was at the Southeast’s fifth-most popular taillight-themed bar, The Scarlet Bulb, when things started to take a strange, almost ominous turn. “Something’s happening,” slurred the old, drunk guy next to me, a former, now disgraced, taillight designer for a major OEM. A woman approached and flung the old guy heavily to the floor, taking his seat. “He’s an asshole, but he’s right. Something is happening.” Even more ominous was that I agreed with them. Something is happening in taillight design, and it’s time we talked about it.

One of the reasons I hang out in taillight bars at all (beyond the fact that most bars and restaurants have forbidden me to discuss vehicle lighting in them anymore, just because some fancy-pants customers don’t like being scream-lectured at regarding amber rear turn indicators, it seems) is so that I can be ready to spot upcoming taillight trends in their somewhat early stages, before they become completely mainstream.

And I think we’re at that point now in taillight design, as there is a clear new trend emerging: the technosquiggle.

It’s been percolating around for a while, the result of newfound freedoms of design from LEDs and new, more effective plastic light diffuser techniques.

The technosquiggle is a design element that turns the main running light part of a taillight — the red “taillight” itself, sometimes incorporating the brake light, too — into a sort of linear shape that is like a simple, calligraphic squiggle, but with curves replaced by more geometric sort of angled lines that lend a certain high-tech look, derived from (I think) the way metal traces look on a circuit board.

The two latest examples are the and :

Image for article titled Taillight Trend Alert: The Technosquiggle

The BMW lights have “three-dimensional sculpting” which just means the plastic housing is formed so that the technosquiggle is sort of extruded, and juts out above the turn indicator and reverse lamp chambers, which nestle in the recesses of the technosquiggle tail/brake lamp.

Lotus’ approach has a sort of neon-sign type effect going on, with a simple squiggle that resembles a partially-straightened paper clip or the , rotated sideways.

Image for article titled Taillight Trend Alert: The Technosquiggle

I’m seeing this general design concept, rendered in a variety of different forms and thicknesses and styles, but all still very much techy-looking squiggly, open linear forms, often enough and on a wide enough variety of cars, hailing from all over the world, that I think we can call it a trend.

Carmakers have been obliquely referring to this sort of bold lighting design with terms like “lighting signature,” but it’s relevant to note that of all these new “lighting signatures” we’re not seeing many clusters of orbs or grids of lights or big flat swaths of color, but we are seeing a lot of generally thin, sweeping linear forms.

I think we can maybe peg the start of this all the way back to the 2016 Toyota Prius re-design, which I feel has a really and included taillights that looked like this:

Image for article titled Taillight Trend Alert: The Technosquiggle

I never thought they looked particularly good, but I do think these may be the first mainstream example of a technosquiggle taillight design.

It’s a thing. It’s a thing that’s happening, and it’s healthy to acknowledge it.

Image for article titled Taillight Trend Alert: The Technosquiggle

Is this just a modern interpretation of the old ’80s and ’90s Solo cup-type brushy squiggle, mated with an electronics aesthetic, and destined to become our era’s Altezza taillights?

Maybe? Maybe not. It’s too soon to say. For now, I’m excited to just see a movement really take off, and I’m curious to see how far it goes.

Comments
Welcome to zzdcar comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Culture
Toyota Is Moving A Prewar 700-Ton Press Machine Halfway Around The World
Toyota Is Moving A Prewar 700-Ton Press Machine Halfway Around The World
closed its São Bernardo Plant in November 2023, marking the end of its first overseas production facility. The closure caps off a period of continuous car production in São Paolo, , lasting over 60 years. The plant was home to a Komatsu 700-ton press that predates itself. And now...
Jul 6, 2025
I Can't Get Enough Of This YouTuber Who Builds Tiny, Fully Functional Scale-Model Cars
I Can't Get Enough Of This YouTuber Who Builds Tiny, Fully Functional Scale-Model Cars
I love tiny, of . I have a that is roughly half the size of a normal cat, and she’s perfect. I own a 2013 , which is like the miniature version of a normal-sized vehicle (at least here in Texas) — but beyond that, I also own a Hot...
Jul 6, 2025
2024 Kia EV9: What Do You Want To Know?
2024 Kia EV9: What Do You Want To Know?
At long last, we are about to get behind the wheel of for the first time. Sure, , and sure, , and sure , but hey — what can you do? Anyway, before we get behind the wheel of this three-row electric beast, we want to know what you...
Jul 6, 2025
Subaru Had It Right All Along
Subaru Had It Right All Along
When first came to the United States, it sold small funky cars that were decidedly un-American. As the company grew its own identity and became more established in the U.S., it became the first automaker to offer an all-wheel-drive passenger car in 1975. Subaru was also an early-adopter of...
Jul 6, 2025
I Entered My Lifted Miata In A Real Off-Road Race, Here's What Happened
I Entered My Lifted Miata In A Real Off-Road Race, Here's What Happened
I have two automotive loves: The first is the Miata, the second is off-road racing. For a while I raced air-cooled Volkswagens in the deserts of California and Nevada and I was lucky enough to co-drive in a class 11 stock bug in the Baja 1000 a few years...
Jul 6, 2025
Watch ABS Fail When MotorWeek Tests A 1997 Chevy S-10
Watch ABS Fail When MotorWeek Tests A 1997 Chevy S-10
MotorWeek’s is some of the on the internet. The long-running automotive news magazine has a treasure trove of tests after being on the air for over 40 years. Where else can you find detailed instrumented testing of long-forgotten cars like the or a ? MotorWeek’s recent Retro Review upload is...
Jul 6, 2025
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.zzdcar.com All Rights Reserved