Steel yourself for a harrowing truth: White is now the most popular car color in America.
Seem innocuous? Therein lies the problem. We’re living in a golden age of motoring, a time when cars are faster and more luxurious than ever before. Painting them the same color as raw tofu just seems . . . wrong.
The quiet resurgence of brown, however, feels very right. Consider this a throwback to the 1970s, when fashion houses, interior designers, and, yes, automakers shifted to earth tones. Back then, Lincoln and Cadillac slathered their land yachts in assorted siennas; at one point, Chrysler’s catalog offered more than 20 shades of bronze, beige, and bister. Today, you’ll find autumnal looks on the runway from the likes of Bottega Veneta, Cerruti 1881, and Orley. San…
