Customizer takes his art beyond cars
DAYTON (AP) — In a business that’s attracting older car buffs and creating new fans with the young, Don Boeke is among the masters.
The longtime car customizer has reincarnated Porsches, Corvettes, Packards and Bentleys, repairing, painting and often pinstriping them. Today, he is getting increasing pleasure from taking his craft outside the garage.
He has customized golf clubs, attache cases and a refrigerator. He painted a Hobart Corp. food mixer candy-apple blends of tangarine-lemon for a trade show. He daubed dolphins and sea urchins on the walls of a swimming pool.
He has painted nose art on F-16s, one a skull with the word “Gravedigger.”
Boeke also has taken the car part of his customizing skills into the home.
He took the body of a Porsche and made a couch with working taillights and turn signals. He turned a Porsche engine into a coffee table. He made a lamp from a Porsche transmission, with holders for beer, newspapers and a remote control. An ignition switch turns the light on.
“It must have been instilled in me at birth because my interest in cars and bicycles has been since I was a child,” the bearded 68-year-old said.
Boeke’s body shop sits amid rusting warehouses on the city’s industrial east side. Tucked into one corner of the two-building shop is his art studio. A small loft apartment where Boeke lives has been carved out of another space.
Those who follow the industry say there has been increased interest in pinstriping, graphics and custom bodywork in the past few years because it has been popularized on television and the Internet and embraced by a new generation.
Bob Bond, publisher/editor of AutoArt Magazine based in Kansas City, Mo., said pinstriping — applying very thin lines of paint to accent the contours of the object — has branched out from vehicles to auto-part sculptures to toilet seats. Those objects are being displayed at art shows and auctioned off.
Darrell Mayabb, an automotive designer and illustrator, said Boeke is well known in the customizing industry and could have made an even bigger name for himself had he not rightly focused on raising his two children as a single parent and looking after his employees.
“He is about the automobile,” said Mayabb, 66, of Arvada, Colo. “And he has MS like me — Modification Sickness. He’s got to modify it.”
Born in Egypt, Ohio — hence his nickname “The Egyptian” — Boeke was in high school in Dayton when he began pinstriping cars.
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