1967 concept Arrinera sports racing coupé, imagined as a prototype from the Eastern Bloc, designed in a realistic 1960s style, low-slung closed-body race car with a wide stance, elongated front and compact rear, smooth but slightly angular body lines, hand-crafted metal panels with subtle imperfections, minimal but functional chrome accents, dual circular headlights under glass covers, simple rectangular grille opening, visible air intakes along the sides and rear for engine cooling, modest front splitter and small integrated rear lip spoiler, period-correct steel or magnesium racing wheels with narrow tires, central exhaust, overall design reflecting limited resources but clever engineering typical of Poland in the 1960s, no modern supercar cues, everything grounded in era-appropriate technology. The car is positioned on a vintage Polish racetrack with worn, slightly cracked asphalt, faded painted lines, simple guardrails, and small utilitarian grandstands in the background, surrounded by flat countryside. The atmosphere is calm with soft, diffused lighting under a cloudy sky, creating a muted, slightly desaturated color palette with subtle film grain, evoking archival photography from the late 1960s. Next to the car stands a young woman in futuristic, retro-inspired clothing as imagined in the 1960s—clean geometric cuts, metallic fabrics, minimalist boots—blending optimism of the space age with Eastern Bloc simplicity. She stands naturally beside the vehicle, looking Ver mais