What: 1986 Ferrari Testarossa Color: Rosso Metallizzato (rossometallizzato; metallic uni; 305/C / 20-R-187; Ferrari) VIN: ZFFSA17A5G0061107 Mileage: 35,000 Price: Upon Request CarFax: N/A Window Sticker: N/A Location: Graham Rahal Performance, Zionsville, IN Listing:Link
Maybe it’s EVs making us yearn for classic and obnoxious ICE again, or maybe it’s just Generation X feeling nostalgic as it watches its amassing 401Ks, but Reagen era hedonistic sportscars are enjoying a renaissance that most any of us can get behind.
Take the Ferrari Testarossa. In any other era, a car with those cheese grater intakes on each side would probably be considered extreme, but sitting next to a Lamborghini Countach the Testarossa struck a toned down and almost subtle pose. Add in a factory color yet rare paint like Rosso Metallizzato and it looked even more reserved.
FYI, there’s just such a car right now at Graham Rahal Performance. If you’re seeking a unique car from this era, this one definitely qualifies. Unlike today, paint to sample services in this era were pretty few and far between, making rare shades such as this one a great get if you want something tailored from the 80s era.
What: 2015 Ferrari 458 Speciale Color: Ferrari Tailor Made Giallo Triplo Strato over Blue Scuro (metallic-UNI; 159752; Ferrari) VIN: Upon Request Mileage: 950 Miles Price: Upon Request CarFax: Upon Request Window Sticker: N/A Location: Miami, FL Listing:Auto Source Group Miami
The result of close collaboration with a US-based Ferrari franchise and Ferrari North America’s Tailor Made department, this 2015 458 Speciale was treated to roughly $75k in special wishes, most of which can be found when you look past the Giallo Triplo Strato paint. A Blue Scuro center stripe was chosen to tie the exterior to the interior, featuring Blue Scuro Alcantara upholstery and yellow stitching. For the sticklers among us, rest assured that the interior Carbon Fiber bits have been finished in Blue Carbon as well. An impulse buy this was not and continues not to be, but in today’s supercar marketplace, it just may prove a safe bet at (nearly) any cost.
What: 2019 Audi RS 5 sportback Color: Audi exclusive Kemora Grey Metallic(metallic-UNI; LX7F; Audi) VIN: WUACWCF51KA904939 Mileage: 69,872 miles Price: $40,991 CarFax:Link Window Sticker: N/A Location: Carrolton, TX Listing:Texas Hot Rides
There’s no use in sugar-coating it- this RS 5 sportback has been hit. Twice. But with a cost of entry that reflects- just $40k- does this represent good Tailored Driver value for money? To us, yeah, totally. Audi’s RS 5 might not be the fire starter that BMW’s M3 is, but its still no slouch. Couple that value and performance with the cult favorite that is Audi exclusive Kemora Grey, and we see a real winner here.
Porsche Centre North Toronto made waves this week when they shard photos of a recent 911 S/T arrival in their showroom. Specced by Marty @OneMan1138, this S/T is laden with Sonderwunsch special wishes touches in a way that’s highly attention-grabbing and likely also polarizing.
The basic specs provided by Porsche Centre North Toronto are these. The car includes 44 bespoke options, including most obviously the color scheme in Ultra Violet, Ruby Star Classic and Racing Yellow. As you can see from inside shots, the interior follows along on the colors and the theme.
First up, Porsche Ultra Violet (ultraviolett; non-metallic UNI; M4A / G7; Porsche) is a 911 GT3 RS color from the 991 era. Ruby Star Classic a.k.a. Rubystone Red (sternrubin; non-metallic UNI; 82N; Porsche) is effectively a hot pink that was a 964-era Carrera Cup color that has remained a cult classic since its inception. The two together are an interesting pair in their own right, though throw in Racing Yellow (renngelb; non-metallic UNI; 1S1 / P3; Porsche) and the net effect goes so much further.
The car, known as “ONEMAN”, isn’t for sale. We’re classifying it in our Market Find – Acquired Taste section in addition to color check because it is such an opinion-generating build. Congratulations to Marty on the new S/T. We hope it’s everything you expected, and it is truly unforgettable.
What: 2017 BMW i8 Coupe Color: Protonic Frozen Yellow Edition (protonischgefrorenesgelb; metallic matte; P5P; BMW) VIN: WBY2Z2C30HV676817 Mileage: 54,400 Price: Bid to $33,250 at 4 Days Left CarFax:Link Window Sticker: N/A Location: Las Vegas, NV Listing:Cars & Bids
Despite what you may think, this one’s a special limited edition and not a one-off. This limited edition run followed the Protonic Red Edition and Protonic Frozen Black Edition that would appear to complete the set of colors of the German flag.
Inside, the car got dark NESO seats with woven yellow and anthracite stitching, an i8 logo embossed on the headrest, floor mats with black leather piping and yellow highlights, contrasting grey seatbelts and door sills with special aluminum oil plates. Other interior features included a black ceramic gear shift lever and Harmon Kardon audio.
Outside, this special edition included accents in Frozen Grey Metallic.
This one has relatively low mileage, and bidding is currently low enough so as to suggest a good buy for such a unique sportscar so long as you don’t mind hybrid drivetrains.
What: 2022 Porsche 911 GT3 Touring Color: Paint to Sample Irish Green (irischgrün; non-metallic UNI; L60E; Porsche) VIN: WP0AC2A92NS271142 Mileage: 1,383 Price: Contact Dealer CarFax:Link Window Sticker: N/A Location: Costa Mesa, CA Listing:European Collectibles
The iconic Porsche color of Irish Green looks the business on a 60s/70s F-body 911, and really everything else in between. Such is the reason that Irish Green is a regular hit on the Paint to Sample color palette for an in-the-know buyer looking to spec their car in Porsche heritage.
What’s the origin of Irish Green at Porsche? It first appeared in 1964 on the Porsche 356C models, and would quickly become Ferry Porsche’s favorite Green… which is saying something because Ferry Porsche loved greens in general.
In the case of this GT3 Touring, the Irish Green paint is paired with a subdued black leather interior that really harks the era from which Irish Green emerged.
What: 2013 BMW M3 Coupe Color: BMW Individual Atlantis Blue Metallic((atlantisblau; metallic uni; 399; BMW) VIN: WBSKG9C56DJ594778 Mileage: 37,600 miles Price: $92,500 CarFax:Link Window Sticker: N/A Location: Scottsdale, AZ Listing:Hubbard Auto Center
Initially built by the obsessive minds at IND Distribution, this BMW Individual Atlantis Blue Metallic M3 has just about everything you can do to an E9X M3. The subject of more than a few blog posts (like this one), both the history and modifications to this Tailored Driver are well documented. Perhaps it should not be a shock then, that even with a minor on the CarFax the asking price can be described as having a significant bump due in part to notoriety. So while this is in no uncertain terms the most expensive dual-hump DCT E9X for sale, whoever writes this check will also find themselves in one of the most sorted examples ever built.
What: 1983 Audi quattro Color: Audi exclusive Nogaro Blue(nogaroblau; pearl effect UNI; Z5M; Audi) VIN: N/A Mileage: 124,500 km, 77,360 miles Price: CHF 98’000 CarFax: N/A Window Sticker: N/A Location: Auto Bordin GmbH, Bettlach, Switzerland Link: Link
Despite evidence you may see here suggesting otherwise, Nogaro Blue as a paint color didn’t show up at Audi until the RS2 era. If you’re doing the math, that’s about a decade before this 1983 Audi quattro left the factory. Yet here it sits.
So how’d it happen? Auto Bordin, the Swiss dealer listing this car tells the story fairly comprehensively, and so we’re going to post the English translation below. In case you don’t have time for that though, its’ worth noting that the car received a considerable full restoration with complete color change to Nogaro Blue.
It’s interesting that an earlier pre-facelift quattro was chosen. Perhaps that’s a preference for the vertical grille and headlight design of the original. It’s also interesting that they kept the original seat leather that shows wear, although from a collector standpoint that was probably a smart move and the reasoning is explained in the full description.
So, has this car grabbed your attention yet? If so, let’s begin the full listing description below.
Begin listing text: source Auto Bordin, Translation by Apple
Audi Turbo quattro “Nogaro Edition” – An Urquattro like certainly not a second
An Audi Urquattro in the color nogaro blue – which Urquattro owner did not have this thought? At the beginning probably no one, since the color only became popular with the Audi RS2 in the 90s. But at that time one could not imagine that this color would be so important for Audi that it could be called THE AUDI BLUE today. But it was not only Audi that had discovered this color for itself in the 90s. While it was called nogaro blue at Audi, it was called jazz blue at VW and maritime blue at Porsche. And since the RS2 was a collaboration between Audi and Porsche, they naturally decided to present this car in this special blue. Since the Audi RS2, almost all RS successor models have been associated with this color. So also the direct successor of the RS2, the RS4 B5 and even the S4 models, were gladly ordered in this color. A phenomenon of the 90s and early 2000s? No, even in 2014, Audi put a nogaro blue RS2 at the Geneva Motor Show together with the then most current Audi RS4 B8 on the stand and launched the “Nogaro Selection” and later also with the RS6 C7 as a limited “Nogaro Edition”. This color has become as historically important for Audi as the name “quattro” that people would like to use it to lift very special models again and again.
Let’s now come back to the previous train of thought, that every Urquattro owner probably had the idea of making his Urquattro like this when he saw the Audi RS2, but hardly anyone did it then….
No wonder, because an Urquattro was not disassembled and repainted so quickly, like a 911 from the 80s. And those who did it, usually did this in addition to the rust control and then hardly wanted to remove the windows or even the engine. So those who were then repainted were simply done à la “farmer painting”.
And to be fair enough, we would never have made this effort to want to do it better, because an Urquattro to paint, including engine compartment and without window rubber’s, means nothing more than work, work and work again… Unimaginable at that time, because the Urquattro used to have hardly the value it has today, where it would be worthwhile “more or less”. The question arises, why don’t you do it today, now that the Urquattro has finally become valuable enough? Quite simply, firstly, where are the spare parts for such a project and secondly, the Urquattro’s that you can buy today as a restoration object, are so rusty that it is almost reflected into an impossible project, if you then have to reshape each rusty sheet metal yourself. In the end, it is not a million Ferrari where this effort is worthwhile and a perfect, well-preserved Urquattro is certainly not taken apart for such a project nowadays.
You notice what we want to get. Actually, it would not be a thing of impossibility, but it is then so elaborate that no one wants to do it and so would be a newly built, nogaro blue Urquattro, something like a unique piece.
And it is precisely in front of such a Urquattro that we are now. And of course you ask yourself rightly – didn’t you just talk about the fact that it’s almost a thing of impossibility and yet we are now facing such an Urquattro? Now this question can only be answered by the following story.
For this we go back to the 90s. Where the then second owner of this Urquattro’s decided, when he got problems with the cylinder head gasket and he wanted to repair the engine again, he still saw the possibility of making his dream of the nogaro blue Urquattro come true. Because if we take out the engine to revise it, we can also take apart the rest of the Urquattro’s at the same time and have it professionally repainted, according to the words to his son at the time.
Said and done, the Urquattro was completely taken apart and taken to a renowned body shop near us. In the meantime, the owner went looking for spare parts. The bodywork itself was not enough for him, he also wanted to restore the vehicle and so many new parts from Audi had to come.
Connoisseurs are probably thinking now – Audi Urquattro and get new parts at AUDI/AMAG – great joke… but that was not the case in the 90s. He was able to order many new parts for the Urquattro, since it was still a current vehicle at the time and thus came to parts that one would only dream of today if one would get them new and original from Audi. Among other things a new KKK Turbo including collector, completely new cylinder head, various hoses, disc rubbers, complete decor and many other specific original parts….
The time in the body shop passed, because on the one hand they took the work seriously and on the other hand to keep the whole thing as economically as possible, it was agreed with the body shop that you could take enough time and you should just work on it when you have time. What you see in retrospect, you can never say to a body shop, because firstly there is never time left anyway and secondly it is not just a year, but then more than three years. But they just wanted a perfect result and so the body was made like that of a new car and extensively sealed with Dinitrol so that rust will never be an issue again.
As fate had, the owner unfortunately died before the Urquattro left the body shop. So that now the son of the deceased owner stood in front of an empty body and several parts. What do you do in such a situation? Not selling at all, this is a memory of the father, in the end you also helped with the project and on the other hand you can’t just assemble it quickly. It simply lacks the time and also the know-how, since you have not taken it apart 100% yourself.
In total, almost 30 years passed and no work was done on the vehicle until the son finally decided to sell the vehicle and it came to us in 2021.
We decided to take over the project. Not because we wanted to do this job, but because we were simply storn away when we saw the Urquattro in this color live. In addition, we liked the impeccable body condition, as well as all the new parts that were available.
At that time we did not know ourselves whether we wanted to do the Urquattro or not. On the one hand, the appeal was great, because we knew that there would never be a second nogaro blue Urquattro at this level and on the other hand we knew that it is not exactly without rebuilding such a vehicle from scratch and this even more so if you have not even taken it apart yourself, but someone else and this without pictures as help. There is probably nothing more complex than wanting to restore a German rally car, including turbo technology and vacuum lines until it no longer works and differential locks and electronics and and and…
To keep the whole thing short – after three winters where we said ourselves we always do a little something about it as soon as we have time, it is now finished. The nogaro blue Urquattro freshly shown as a veteran in July 2024 and to be honest, we wouldn’t want to do this a second time, but somehow you supplant the whole thing when you stand in front of the finished car – breathtakingly beautiful, especially outside when the sun shines on this color.
Our ultimate goal was to make the vehicle as if it were ordered from the factory in the special color nogaro blue. Say no tuning or tinted windows, white rims, dark taillights since Jg. 1983, no blue spoiler, etc. Even from the decor it had to look like fresh from the factory with all the emblems etc. Only this and no different is seen from our point of view, the nogaro blue Urquattro, a tribute to the later RS2.
We also do not want to lean so far out of the window and say that this is probably the only nogaro blue Urquattro that was made at this level, yet we are convinced that hardly anyone has ever made this effort.
The pictures speak for themselves, even if there are only 16, we have of course archived more pictures about the whole process for you. Nevertheless, you must have seen the vehicle in real life, not to mention driving. Because here you can see all the new parts, how powerful the newly built 5 cylinder turbo engine accelerates and this fortunately without a catalyst as with the later unsaleable Edition models…
It is a Urquattro for individualists, not for original fetishists. And yet it is not a vehicle that one would not describe as original at first glance. As a successful rally vehicle, the Urquattro always had its charm of wanting to have it in a different color. Until now it was only available in red or white as an “exciting color” and now it is available for ONE lucky one even in nogaro blue.
Errors, errors and prior sale reserved, no liability for printing and typing errors / Despite the great care, ad errors are not excluded / Exchange possibly possible / On parle français / Parliamo italiano / Anonymous inquiries and SMS will not be answered! Test drive only with purchase and against deposit of Fr. 200.-
Not exactly one that rolls off the tongue, but as Juliet once told Romeo- what’s in a name? In this case, measuring a generous 24 characters spread over 7 syllables, quite a lot actually. Fish Silvergrey Metallic was added to Porsche’s Paint to Sample program in 2023, and meshes the aforementioned silvergrey with a tasteful hint of green. Nearly chromaflair-lite in execution and cost, Fish Silvergrey Metallic as seen here is quietly making a serious case for itself in the world of Tailored Driver.
What: 1982 Ferrari Mondial Coupé Color: Blu Chiaro (bluchiaro; metallic UNI; 503/C; Ferrari) VIN: N/A Mileage: 53,000 km shown, 32,932 miles Bid Price: € 45,900 CarFax: N/A Window Sticker: N/A Location: Bari, Italy Listing:Autoscout24.de
If there’s a bargain Ferrari nowadays then maybe that’s the Mondial. It may not feature the unique Bertone design or the romance of the Dino GT4, but it’s got a similar 2+2 configuration that will allow you to drive around with some of your shorter friends.
For this car, we turn to Europe where rare and eccentric specifications are more commonly found. Though a factory color, we think Blu Chiaro over Crema leather is still a sophisticated and rare specification. Throw in red carpets and that becomes decidedly more sophisticated and rare.
This one is private party in Italy, which means you should be aware and consider costs of exportation and potential VAT taxes that could be associated. That said, the price is reasonable and an Italian pedigree to a Ferrari is pretty great, not to mention it’s likely never seen salt.
If the car is as advertised, it’s also a first owner, original paint and recently serviced example. These also make it very compelling.