Ettore Bugatti, perhaps bored with building such extravagant symbols of single-minded genius like the Royale, devised a staggering work of aeronautical wonder that never saw the light of the day.
The name “Bugatti” holds international esteem for entirely different reasons today than it did in the 1930s. The company’s founder, Ettore Bugatti, considered each vehicle a work of art—conceived from ...
Legend holds that Ettore Bugatti was at dinner with some of his wealthiest clients when an aristocratic lady -- who already owned numerous Bugattis -- lamented, "I want to buy another Bugatti…but I ...
The Peter Mullin Automotive Museum Foundation have selected Automobile Metal Shaping Company (AMS) to construct the body for Jean Bugatti's famous 1939 Bugatti Type 64 Coupe Chassis #64002, according ...
Mark McNabb was a contributor at TopSpeed from 2013 to 2018. Growing up, Mark always had a mind for tinkering on random items throughout his home and dad’s garage, including a 1953 Ford Mainline and ...
While there were surely plenty of vintage Bugattis to ogle at the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance over the weekend, it seemed that most of Bugatti’s attention went to promoting the rare collection of ...
The Mullin Automotive Museum, a Southern California institution devoted to the preservation of French art and automobiles from the Art Deco era, announced it will premiere an exhibition called The Art ...
Alongside some of the most significant cars in history, the former Shah of Iran’s 57C Bugatti is now a confirmed showpiece at the new Petersen Museum in Los Angeles, California. Originally gifted to ...
The Mullin Automotive Museum in Oxnard is always overflowing with rare, handmade, and expensive Bugattis from the gilded, prewar era. But the Bugattis in the current exhibit have neither wheels nor ...
Kurt Ernst August 8, 2012 Comment Now! Automotive designer Jean Bugatti was the man behind the styling of such classic Bugatti automobiles as the Type 41 Royale and the Type 57. Despite his artistic ...
The name “Bugatti” holds international esteem for entirely different reasons today than it did in the 1930s. The company’s founder, Ettore Bugatti, considered each vehicle a work of art—conceived from ...
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