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Times Staff Writer

There are captains of industry, and then there are commodores. For a few short hours at the start of the Los Angeles Auto Show, the flag-rank executives of the automotive business -- chief executives, head designers and other board-level types -- jetted in to field questions from reporters and brag on their latest lumps of road-going gorgeousnessness. You might suspect auto executives of being merely the most exalted form of plaid-wearing car salesmen, but these gentlemen -- and they are, almost without exception, men -- are some of the most beautifully dressed and perfectly appointed man-divas you’ll ever meet (if you’re not hustled aside by their handlers). They have to be. Commanding multibillion-dollar global empires with the stroke of a Tibaldi pen, auto execs are the walking, talking embodiments of their brands. They work in a business obsessed with image and design. Their personal presentation is a form of company equity.

The Los Angeles Auto Show, which ends today at the Convention Center, offers unusually good access to these titans of transportation, and so we took the opportunity to quiz them about their personal style, their clothing choices and their guilty fashion pleasures.

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dan.neil@latimes.com

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Stephan Winkelmann

CEO of Lamborghini

Age: 43

Home: Born in Berlin, raised in Rome; now lives in Bologna, Italy

Wearing: Bespoke pinstripe suit and shirt, Church boots with laces, stainless steel Rolex watch, Marinella tie (made in Naples)

Backstory: As the head of the most outrageous and style-obsessed of the Italian exotic sports car companies, the dapper Winkelmann fills a job no mere bean counter could handle. Also, as a true German-Italian, he is ideally suited to negotiate the cultural gulf between the exuberant-if-undisciplined Italian car culture and the rigorous engineering and accounting of Audi, which now owns Lamborghini. Chief executive since 2005, Winkelmann has steered the company’s product resurgence and has seen sales rise dramatically.

Personal style: With the Euro dial set to maximum, Winkelmann knows exactly what he likes and how he likes it. In suits, always English fabrics (“fewer wrinkles”), usually pinstripes, typically three-button, double vent, Continental cut. “I like my suits tight, with the trouser a bit shorter, with a 4-centimeter cuff.”

Bespoke or off the rack: Bespoke. “My tailor in Turin? He has no name.”

Buttons or cuff links: “I wear a lot of buttoned shirts -- maybe 70% -- but I never button the sleeve. If I wear a button-down, I never button the collar. Otherwise, I prefer a French-cut collar. I don’t really like extreme, the Kent collar.”

Money quote: “I hate gold. Never wear gold.”

Fashion indulgence: Sculpted sideburns. “I like them a bit longer. I don’t care if they are fashionable.”

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Carlos Ghosn

CEO of Nissan-Renault

Age: 53

Home: Born and raised in Brazil; lives in Paris

Wearing: Louis Vuitton, head to toe

How that happened: Ghosn was visiting the chief executive of Louis Vuitton, Yves Carcelle, at the special-order studio in Paris this year when Carcelle suggested he dress Ghosn for the high-profile launch of the Nissan GT-R, a ferocious new sports car. “I was interested in doing some co-marketing,” Ghosn says. “The car can hold two golf bags. Why not Louis Vuitton golf bags?” Tailors arrived at Ghosn’s Renault office and soon two outfits -- suits, shirts, ties, shoes, watch -- arrived.

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Backstory: As the head of both Nissan and Renault (and board member of IBM), Ghosn is a business superstar, particularly in Japan, where he is the only foreigner to head a major domestic auto company. A dusk-to-dawn worker splitting his time between Paris and Tokyo, Ghosn has the reputation as a tremendously tough deal-maker and ruthless cost-cutter.

Personal style: A classic dresser, preferring dark three-button suits and black shoes for what he calls “official presentation.”

Bespoke or off the rack: Off the rack

Money quote: “Men who have suits made for them have time to have suits made for them.”

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Tom Purves

Chairman and CEO,

BMW U.S. Holding Corp.

Age: 58

Home: Born in Edinburgh, Scotland; lives in New York

Wearing: John Bray pinstripe suit (just off St. James Square in London), Hermes tie, Van Cleef and Arpels watch, Church shoes

Backstory: Purves is known as a no-nonsense, all-in businessman and a car guy to the core. After serving his apprenticeship at Rolls-Royce, he worked for BMW at a variety of overseas posts before being named head of BMW in the U.S. in 1999. Since then, BMW sales have doubled and he has overseen the success of the reborn Mini brand.

Personal style: Immaculate and traditional, less Continental than British, mostly dark pinstripe suits. “I wear a jacket almost always,” he says, “simply because it’s so practical, with pockets for everything.”

Bespoke or off the rack: Off the rack, prefers Canelli and Zegna

Money quote: “I was taught to wear black shoes during the week and brown shoes on the weekend.”

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Fashion indulgence: Plus fours while playing golf. “They’re very practical because you don’t get mud on your trousers.”

In the suitcase: Blue blazer, gray flannel trousers, white shirt (French cuff), black shoes and black belt. “With that in your suitcase, you can get through just about anything.”

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Franz Von Holzhausen

Director of Design, Mazda

Age: 39

Home: Born and raised in Simsbury, Conn.; now lives in Long Beach

Wearing: Hudson black jeans, Thierry Mugler black jacket with vented pockets and dress hooks at the collar, burgundy Dolce & Gabbana shirt, Nixon Surf Watch, Prada loafers, Calvin Klein cologne

Backstory: A rising star in automotive design, Von Holzhausen is responsible for Mazda’s North American Design Center in Irvine. Before Mazda, he worked at GM, where he headed the design team for Pontiac Solstice and Saturn Sky. He trained at Art Center College of Design in Pasadena.

Personal style: A sun-kissed California hipster clotheshorse with a “big-ass closet,” Von Holzhausen thinks being a designer makes him notice fine details and look over the fashion horizon with a restless eye. “Recently, I’ve been shopping more in New York than L.A., more boutique, less name brand.”

Bespoke or off the rack: Off the rack. “I can’t afford Savile Row.”

Money quote: “I really appreciated Tom Ford’s sense of style, the romance and sex he brought to Gucci that’s gone now that he’s gone.”

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Favorite labels: Prada, Gucci, Hugo Boss, Andrea Palombini, Dolce & Gabbana

Favorite piece of clothing: Prada shoes. “I wore through three pairs of black short boots.”

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