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Images from a cool photo shoot
about a very
unique and rare car, the 1969 Playboy Special Edition
Ford Mustang, for
a magazine article about the car (see below).
(with additonal photos of Shannan from earlier
shoots).
Model: Shannan
Harris
Styling: Leila Zaidan
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Shannan also looks great with exotics, pickups, Japanese race
bikes,
& pools! (More of Shannan from shoots that have been rotated
off.)
1969 Mustang Convertible
Playboy
Special Edition
Text & Photos: AdPix.Biz
Despite the record-setting sales of Ford’s Mustang just a few
years
earlier (418,000 were sold the first year, 22,000 of those the
first
day!), Ford thought they needed something to inject more life
into the
car, and did so with a successful re-design for 1969, making it
a bit
larger and sleeker in every dimension. Ford sold 299,824
1969
Mustangs, which were also the first to have radial tires,
intermittent
wipers, and those exterior mirrors everyone copied.
Ford also wanted to inject some youth and “freedom,” so they
linked up
with Playboy to produce these Special Editions for Playboy
Playmates.
Both Mustang and Playboy were hitting their respective strides
back
then, Playboy in stilletos.
These Special Editions were painted a hue of pink selected by
Hugh
himself (paint code 71617) and the Playmate could select any of
the 12
or so body combinations available, including a convertible like
this
one. It is not clear whether these were only for Playmate of the
Year,
or for all Playmates. But since only ten were made each year for
six
years, and although it was possible for individuals to select
some of
the same options that made them Special Editions, a true Playboy
Special Edition is easily one of the rarest Mustangs ever
produced.
This one even came to its owner with a “Playmate of the Year”
tag!
If it was Playmate of the Year, then this one was owned by the
late
Connie Kreski, a 20-year old blonde nursing student in Detroit
Michigan
who later starred in eight feature films and looked like, if you
squint
and joggle your computer screen around a bit, like Shannan! We
did the
best we could.
Some pertinent statistics: Connie Kreski, 35-23-36, 118 lbs,
5’5”
(Playmate “average” for 1969 was 35.5-23.38-35.04, 113 lbs,
5’4”)
1969 Ford Mustang: just under 3,000 pounds, 10 engines available
from
115 hp to 376 hp for the Boss (some say 400+ hp), “average” was
0-60 in
8 seconds and $3,000.
The poses are rather plain because they are authentic to the
period.