Venezuelan automotive digital designer Emmanuel Brito is at it again, rendering us such beautiful works of art that we want them made, right away.

His Instagram handle, personalizatuauto, is always a hotbed for beautiful CGI cars, and his latest is a stunning render of a 1967 Chevrolet Camaro. It’s like art added to a storied car, one that has an important place in American automobile history.

Related: This Is The 4-Door Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 We Need In Our Life

The 1967 Chevrolet Camaro Spoiled Buyers With Choice

The Camaro came late to the scene, in 1967, by which time the Ford Mustang was ruling the roost. For its debut, the Camaro brought with it dozens of options to choose from. The base engine was the 230 c.i. inline 6 that made 140 horsepower, but you could get Chevy to put in just about any engine you wished. For instance, in the SS package, the Camaro beat to the drum of a 396 cu in V8 that made 375 horsepower.

Later the same year, the Camaro also got a new automatic transmission option as the three-speed Turbo Hydra-Matic 350 joined the two-speed Powerglide as well as the manual transmissions.

The most intriguing version of the 1967 Chevy Camaro was the hush-hush Z28 package. It was not advertised but frankly did not need the publicity. Designed to compete in the Sports Car Club of America (SCCA) Trans-Am racing series, it carried a 302 c.i. V8 engine and while the official horsepower figures read 290, it actually made between 350 and 400 horsepower.

We hope this render carries the most powerful motor under the hood.

Related: This Classic Chevy Chevelle Render Can Make Grown Men Cry

Do You Dig This ’67 Camaro?

Brito seems to have a thing for American classic cars, as he also did a Chevy Chevelle with two turbos in the headlight housings.

Brito asked: "New rendering for this classic '67 Chevrolet Camaro what do you think?”

Most of his fans consider the car rather stunning although opinions differed on whether it was “Clean and beautiful” or just “beautifully ugly.”

It is a nice, clean design with the paint polished to a mirror-like shine and done in a pastel beige/brown shade that seemed to suit the car.

One comment read, “Have you ever thought of building 3d models for video games like BeamNG.drive?

In response to all the crazy praise he was receiving, the designer replied: “I love playing it! It is best with a wheel and pedals with force feedback. But it is crazy realistic!”

Source: Instagram personalizatuauto