Press release8/11/2022

Black and yellow: a timeless combination

Black and yellow: a timeless combination

Molsheim

Although Bugatti’s motorsport heritage is most associated with French Racing Blue, many of its most elegant cars were finished in the favorite color combination of its founder Ettore Bugatti: black and yellow.

Many examples of black and yellow Bugattis are cared for as part of the Schlumpf collection – the largest collection of Bugatti vehicles in the world.
The very first Bugatti Chiron delivered to North America was finished in a striking yellow and bare black carbon combination.
The very first Bugatti Chiron delivered to North America was finished in a striking yellow and bare black carbon combination.
The Veyron 16.4 Grand Sport Vitesse ‘1-of-1’ introduced in 2014 and a Type 40 Fiacre finished in black and yellow.
The Type 55 and its Jean Bugatti-designed two-seater Roadster body.
The favorite color combination of Ettore Bugatti: black and yellow.
The favorite color combination of Ettore Bugatti: black and yellow.
The popularity of this  famous duo-tone paintwork has endured over time.
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For true connoisseurs of the Bugatti brand, a hyper sports car finished in black and yellow isn’t just a striking incarnation of Bugatti’s famous duo-tone paintwork; it’s a nod to the founder himself. Many of Ettore Bugatti’s personal vehicles were finished in the eye-catching livery, and its popularity has endured from the founder, through the Jean Bugatti-designed era of cars and into the modern day.

The history of black and yellow stretches right back to the home of Bugatti in Molsheim, where the beams that sat above the old oak gates were finished in the striking colors favored by Ettore. Although many of Ettore’s early personal cars were black, as Bugatti vehicles evolved from their traditional motorsport-led Grand Prix designs and began to fully embrace the Art Deco movement, the now-famous duo-tone designs sparked a favorite combination of colors for Ettore. And it was that spark that lit a fire encouraging countless customers to embrace black and yellow for their very own Bugatti.

Famously, Ettore Bugatti’s Type 41 Royale was painted in black and yellow. Around the same time, an example of the Type 40 Roadster was finished in the same color scheme, as was a Type 44. But the popularity of this design was set to surge.

The Type 55 – a motorsport-inspired car with the 2.3-liter straight-eight engine from the Type 51 racer – was most sought-after with its Jean Bugatti-designed two-seater Roadster body. And still today the most revered of those Roadsters are finished in the timeless Ettore Bugatti-favored combination of black and yellow. Then, just two years after the Type 55 was introduced – in 1934 – one of the most beautiful and elegant Bugatti Roadsters ever built would be completed: the Type 57 Grand Raid Roadster Usine. And the colors of choice? Black and yellow.

In the modern era of Bugatti, this timeless combination has never been forgotten. In 2014, the Veyron 16.4 Grand Sport Vitesse ‘1-of-1’ was introduced, finished in black with a contrasting yellow accent, yellow detailing on the wheels and ‘EB’ logos and a complementary interior. The black leather is offset with yellow stitching and a yellow laser-perforated silhouette of the Veyron on the door panels.

In the Chiron¹ era, the very first car delivered to North America was finished in a striking yellow and bare black carbon combination, including full painted yellow alloy wheels. With the introduction of the Chiron Pur Sport² in 2020, the black and yellow combination was reinvented once again for a one-off with a vibrant ‘Jaune Molsheim’ yellow finish, a special shade that pays homage to the original yellow used by Ettore Bugatti. This color comes contrasted with exposed turquoise carbon fiber highlights.

Achim Anscheidt, Bugatti Design Director, said: “In almost everything we do, we take inspiration from the founding Bugatti family; inventing our own technologies – just as Ettore did – and pushing the boundaries of design and elegance – just like Jean Bugatti – to create something that is unlike anything else on the road. As Ettore said: “If comparable, it is no longer Bugatti.”

“That is why black and yellow remains such an important combination for us, both as a design team and as a brand. Of course, we always look to reinvent it – Ettore would never be satisfied with tradition for tradition’s sake – but you will forever find the favored colors of our founder closely associated with the Bugatti brand.”

Today, many examples of black and yellow Bugattis are cared for as part of the Schlumpf collection – the largest collection of Bugatti vehicles in the world – now located in the National Automobile Museum in Mulhouse in the heart of Alsace. Covering an area of more than 25,000 square meters, the exhibition comprises 400 of the world’s rarest, most magnificent and most valuable cars – including over 135 Bugatti models, such as two of just six Type 41 Royale ever built.

Thank you to the Mulhouse National Automobile Museum for providing the vehicles used in these images.

Press Contact

Nicole AugerHead of Marketing and Communicationsnicole.auger@bugatti.com

Fuel consumption and emissions

  • Bolide: Not subject to Directive 1999/94/EC, as it is a racing vehicle not intended for use on public roads.

    • Centodieci: WLTP fuel consumption, l/100 km: low phase 40.31 / medium phase 22.15 / high phase 17.89 / extra high phase 17.12 / combined 21.47; CO2 emissions combined, g / km: NA; efficiency class: G

    • Chiron: WLTP fuel consumption, l/100 km: low phase 44.56 / medium phase 24.80 / high phase 21.29 / extra high phase 21.57 / combined 25.19; CO2 emissions combined, g/km: 571.64; efficiency class: G

    • Chiron Profilée: WLTP fuel consumption, l/100 km: low phase 44.56 / medium phase 24.80 / high phase 21.29 / extra high phase 21.57 / combined 25.19; CO2 emissions combined, g/km: 571.64; efficiency class: G

      • Chiron Pur Sport: WLTP fuel consumption, l/100 km: low phase 44.56 / medium phase 24.80 / high phase 21.29 / extra high phase 21.57 / combined 25.19; CO2 emissions combined, g/km: 571.64; efficiency class: G

      • Chiron Sport: WLTP fuel consumption, l/100 km: low phase 44.56 / medium phase 24.80 / high phase 21.29 / extra high phase 21.57 / combined 25.19; CO2 emissions combined, g/km: 571.64; efficiency class: G

      • Chiron Super Sport: WLTP fuel consumption, l/100 km: low phase 40.31 / medium phase 22.15 / high phase 17.89 / extra high phase 17.12 / combined 21.47; CO2 emissions combined, g/km: 486.72; efficiency class: G

      • Chiron Super Sport 300+: WLTP fuel consumption, l/100 km: low phase 40.31 / medium phase 22.15 / high phase 17.89 / extra high phase 17.12 / combined 21.47; CO2 emissions combined, g/km: 486.72; efficiency class: G

      • Divo: WLTP fuel consumption, l/100 km: low phase 43,33 / medium phase 22,15 / high phase 17,99 / extra high phase 18,28 / combined 22,32; CO2 emissions combined, g/km: 505,61; efficiency class: G

      • La Voiture Noire: WLTP fuel consumption, l/100 km: low phase 43,33 / medium phase 22,15 / high phase 17,99 / extra high phase 18,28 / combined 22,32; CO2 emissions combined, g/km: 505,61; efficiency class: G

        • Tourbillon: This model is currently not subject to directive 1999/94/EC, as type approval has not yet been granted.

        • W16 Mistral: This model is not subject to Directive 1999/94/EC, as type approval has not yet been granted.

          Bugatti

          The specified fuel consumption and emission data have been determined according to the measurement procedures prescribed by law.

          Further information on official fuel consumption figures and the official specific CO2 emissions of new passenger cars can be found in the “Guide on the fuel economy, CO2 emissions and power consumption of new passenger car models”, which is available free of charge at all sales dealerships and from DAT Deutsche Automobil Treuhand GmbH, Hellmuth-Hirth-Str. 1, D-73760 Ostfildern, Germany and at www.dat.de.

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