Tag Archives: Monterey Car Week

Bentley Mulliner Ombre—The Future of Handcrafted Paintwork, Now Available to Order

At this year’s Monterey Car Week, Bentley used the stage of The Quail, A Motorsports Gathering to debut something that feels less like automotive paintwork and more like artistry on wheels. It’s called Ombre by Mulliner, and it’s one of the most technically demanding finishes ever attempted at Bentley’s famed Dream Factory in Crewe, England.

Bentley Mulliner Ombre—The Future of Handcrafted Paintwork, Now Available to Order

The debut canvas? A Continental GT Speed—already one of the most powerful and luxurious grand tourers in the world. But this one-off example is no ordinary GT. Its exterior wears a hypnotic fade that shifts seamlessly from a vibrant Topaz at the nose to a deep Windsor Blue at the tail, with the transition flowing along the car’s muscular haunches. Even the 22-inch swept 10-spoke wheels join the spectacle, mirroring the bodywork’s front-to-rear tonal shift.

56 Hours of Pure Craftsmanship

Creating the Ombre effect isn’t as simple as layering one shade over another. Bentley’s paint technicians begin by coating the car in the chosen contrast colors—front and rear—before meticulously applying the blend in stages. Each layer uses paint tinted by hand, employing traditional mixing methods. Achieving the perfect fade requires roughly 56 hours of painstaking labor, as the craftsmen constantly adapt to the way the paints behave in combination.

The result is a finish that’s both uniform and unique—no two Ombre cars will ever be identical. To maintain quality and visual harmony, Mulliner offers three curated color combinations designed to ensure the transition looks natural and flawless to the naked eye.

A Cabin That Mirrors the Exterior Drama

Inside, the theme continues. Mulliner’s Bespoke Studio has extended the gradient concept into the cabin, where the front seats, steering wheel, and dashboard are cloaked in Topaz hide, fading elegantly into the deep Beluga leather at the rear. Adding a spark of contrast, a Dragonfly accent color highlights seat piping and stitching across the cabin.

To balance the visual drama, tactile materials were carefully chosen: Satin Beluga veneers line the instrument panel, center console, and treadplates, while the latest tech appointments—Bentley’s Rotating Display, the Naim for Bentley audio system, and the Dark Chrome Interior Specification—ensure the GT Speed feels as modern as it looks bespoke.

From One-Off to Commissionable Reality

Though the car shown in Monterey began as a personal commission, Bentley has now opened the door for clients worldwide to order one of these Ombre finishes through Mulliner’s network. For collectors and enthusiasts, it’s a chance to turn their Continental into a rolling piece of automotive art—one that’s as much about patience, craftsmanship, and vision as it is horsepower and torque.

With Ombre by Mulliner, Bentley once again reaffirms its position not only as a manufacturer of ultra-luxury performance cars but as a true curator of automotive artistry. The fade may be subtle, but its impact on the GT Speed’s presence is unforgettable.

Source: Bentley

Alfa Romeo 33 Stradale Steals the Spotlight at Monterey Car Week

Monterey Car Week has no shortage of automotive royalty. Pebble Beach lawns glitter with concours perfection, while Laguna Seca howls with vintage racers. But this year, one car commanded attention everywhere it appeared: the reborn Alfa Romeo 33 Stradale.

Making its North American debut, the 33 Stradale isn’t just another multimillion-dollar Italian exotic vying for attention. It’s a rolling sculpture—an heirloom revived for the 21st century. Inspired by the legendary 1967 Tipo 33 Stradale, widely regarded as one of the most beautiful cars ever built, the new car channels that spirit while unapologetically embracing modern performance.

Beauty Reborn

The numbers alone are staggering. A twin-turbocharged 3.0-liter V-6 churns out 630 horsepower, good for 0–62 mph in under three seconds and a 207-mph top speed. That’s hypercar territory, but the 33 Stradale is more than an exercise in brute force. Built entirely by hand at Carrozzeria Touring Superleggera in Milan, each car is essentially a one-off, tailored to its owner’s exact vision. The carbon-fiber monocoque, dihedral doors, and active suspension deliver the technical credentials, but the analog-inspired cockpit makes clear this is a driver’s car first.

Only 33 examples will ever exist, and—unsurprisingly—all are spoken for.

A Four-Day Tour de Force

Alfa Romeo didn’t settle for a static unveiling. Instead, the 33 Stradale was the centerpiece of a curated tour across Monterey’s most hallowed stages.

  • Motorlux (August 13): At the Monterey Jet Center, the Stradale took center stage among Alfa’s current lineup and a backdrop of private jets and vintage aircraft. More than just eye candy, the setting highlighted the car’s fusion of luxury, engineering, and aviation-inspired design.
  • Hagerty House (August 14): In a quieter, more intimate setting along Pebble Beach’s coast, Alfa invited select guests for a fireside chat with Alfa marketing chief Cristiano Fiorio and U.S. customer Glynn Bloomquist. The discussion revealed the bespoke process behind the car, where each owner collaborates with Centro Stile designers like an artist with a Renaissance workshop.
  • The Quail (August 15): Among a field of unicorn Ferraris, Bugattis, and Lamborghinis, the Stradale still managed to turn heads. Its sculpted bodywork drew crowds, a rare feat at an event where sensory overload is the norm.
  • Laguna Seca (August 16): No Alfa Romeo celebration would be complete without racing. On the paddock of WeatherTech Raceway, with the sound of vintage Can-Am and Formula One machines echoing across the hills, the Stradale stood as living proof of Alfa’s motorsport DNA.

More Than a Collectible

In an era where digital dashboards and over-the-air updates dominate the industry, the 33 Stradale feels defiantly analog. Its scarcity ensures it will spend much of its life in climate-controlled garages, but that doesn’t make it any less significant. Alfa Romeo has distilled its racing pedigree, design legacy, and Italian soul into just 33 cars, creating not only a collector’s piece but also a statement: true automotive art is alive and well.

At Monterey Car Week 2025, among the priceless classics and the latest hypercars, it was the 33 Stradale that reminded us why we fall in love with cars in the first place.

Source: Stellantis

$26 Million Ferrari Daytona SP3 Steals the Show at Monterey Car Week Auction

Auction week in Monterey always delivers drama, but even seasoned bidders did a double-take when the hammer fell on a Ferrari Daytona SP3 at RM Sotheby’s. The price? A staggering $26 million—more than ten times its original sticker.

This wasn’t just any SP3. Ferrari built the car specifically for the event, a one-off finished in exposed carbon fiber with a bold yellow livery stretching nose to tail, plus a bespoke interior plastered with prancing horse motifs. The sale benefitted the Ferrari Foundation, the automaker’s U.S.-based 501(c)(3) supporting education. If you’re going to write a big check, this was the place to do it.

The Daytona SP3 itself hardly needs an introduction. Launched in 2021 as part of Ferrari’s exclusive “Icona” series, it was essentially a LaFerrari without the hybrid trickery, clothed in bodywork that channels the P3 and P4 endurance racers of the 1960s. Production was capped at 599 cars, each starting around $2.25 million, and every slot was spoken for before the public even saw the car. Predictably, examples quickly began trading well above MSRP. Just not ten times MSRP.

With RM Sotheby’s gavel drop, this SP3 now holds the record as the most expensive new Ferrari ever sold at auction. It also took the top spot for Monterey Car Week overall, edging out another Maranello masterpiece: a 1961 Ferrari 250 California Spyder Competizione that crossed Gooding & Christie’s block for just over $25 million.

For perspective, the next-highest seller at RM Sotheby’s was a Ferrari F40 LM at a mere $11 million—a bargain in this rarified company.

In a weekend defined by stratospheric sales, Ferrari proved once again that nothing tugs at a collector’s wallet—or heartstrings—like a prancing horse.

Source: Ferrari