Without being offensive, what you are witnessing is a phenomenon I call "lowering your standards". Sorry, I know there are better ways to describe this "thing", but bear with me.
Here's an example: for decades, the only Mustangs worth owning and/or restoring were the 64 to 66 years and they had to be V-8 powered. There were a lot, around 1.6 million were made. Then big blocks became the rage - the 67 390, and bigger blocks right up to 1973. Remember, all were V-8 Mustangs.
The next step was the hard part - 6 cylinder Mustangs. A strange, and somewhat wonderful thing happened, 6 cylinder Mustangs began to get formal recognition at car shows. One of the Gold Card Judges that "tutored" many of us had a plausible answer - a typical 6 cylinder Mustang had few "options", so there were less items to judge and ultimately deduct points, so those cars got "gold" (say what?).
What happened next is the real world - we ran out of "classic" Mustangs. Sitting on the sidelines were the Cougar guys. They were "cousins". We shared engines, and a lot of other parts. The same relationship happened with Fairlanes and Falcons. "Restoration" began.
Am I being negative? No. Just realistic. My first Ford was a 1960 Starliner, body style 63, a Fastback Ford Galaxy. That's my roots. Damn, I wish I still had that Car.
Jim