Toro Rosso – F1 Colours https://f1colours.sebpatrick.co.uk The Original Liveries Blog Wed, 03 Apr 2019 12:54:54 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.9 31179357 2019 Liveries: The Verdict! https://f1colours.sebpatrick.co.uk/annual-roundups/2019-liveries-the-verdict/ https://f1colours.sebpatrick.co.uk/annual-roundups/2019-liveries-the-verdict/#comments Fri, 08 Mar 2019 13:03:59 +0000 https://f1colours.sebpatrick.co.uk/?p=3278 It's been a bit of a stop-start livery season for us in 2019, but you knew we'd get to this eventually - so read on for our take on the colourful and (mostly) surprising 2019 grid!

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It’s been a bit of a stop-start livery season for us in 2019, but you knew we’d get to this eventually – so read on for our take on the colourful and (mostly) surprising 2019 grid!

First off, though, a bit of housekeeping. Regular followers of the site may have noticed that we haven’t done our usual full slate of coverage of the launches this year – we started out doing so, but then a combination of work pressures, holiday and illness meant that I fell behind and wasn’t able to catch up before all the cars were out, and by then it was a bit too late. This, coupled with a few other things relating to the site (how it’s a not-for-profit site but one that has grown in size and audience over the years) have caused me to have a bit of a rethink regarding F1 Colours and its general purpose and ongoing future – you can read more about this at the end of the post.

But for now, given that I haven’t commented on most of the 2019 liveries yet, I’m sure you’re aching to see what the official F1C take on all of them is… so let’s get cracking!

Mercedes AMG Petronas

A really pleasant surprise here, with a new interpretation of the usual silver/turquoise/black that actually feels somewhat fresh. Turning the Petronas colouring into what looks like an illuminated strip gives it an on-trend, Formula E kind of feel, the dialling down of the black (actually now more of a dark grey) to just sit at the back of the car works well too – and the new pattern of mini Mercedes three-point stars is unusual but creates a strong motion effect. The only thing I don’t really like is the white race numbers – they sit well on the side view, but it’s a real shame not having Hamilton’s red 44 on the nose. Maybe that’ll change once the season kicks in. But otherwise, top work from a team we’re not usually used to seeing push their designs positively.

Score: 8/10 – Possibly the best livery Mercedes have ever had

Scuderia Ferrari

Another pleasant surprise, given that the initial addition of Mission Winnow to a so-called “new livery” partway through last season was somewhat disappointing. But here, the big news is that black has returned as the trim colour to a Ferrari – and while I’d still prefer to see it done in a way that looks more early ’90s-ish (that is, with fully black wings), it’s good to see, and sets apart Mission Winnow from the usual Marlboro stylings. Not certain that the engine cover logo looks brilliant in black lettering, and it’s a shame those lovely retro race number boxes have gone – but still, with what looks to be a different shade of red from recent years, this is a more striking Ferrari than we’ve generally been used to.

Score: 7/10 – Marks for changing the secondary colour, even if the application doesn’t fully work

Aston Martin Red Bull Racing

Well, yes. It’s still a decent-looking livery, but the differences between this and 2018 are imperceptible – just a Honda logo where previously there was TAG Heuer. Appreciate that they want to stick with something they think works, and the matt job does that – but what’s wrong with giving it little tweaks as the years tick by?

Score: 6/10 – It’s a nice-looking car, but one we’ve seen too many times by now

Renault Sport Racing Limited

See, like Renault have done! At first glance this looks identical to last year’s superb effort, but they’ve actually made minor tweaks to make it even better. The race numbers have been filled in (just like we asked!) and there’s also the really neat touch of making the inner wing endplates yellow – just to give the colour scheme a bit more of a pop. Would still like to see some more white thrown in there, but this is still a very smart car overall.

Score: 9/10 – Looks like a Renault ought to look, and pops off the track

Rich Energy Haas F1 Team

Oh dear. On the one hand, it’s not as if a largely black car with gold and white bits is terrible-looking. But if you’re going to appropriate the JPS livery with no actual connection to it you’d better make sure you get it note-perfect, and this look just hasn’t, with the white-logo half of the car working at odds with the gold-logo half. It’s definitely the best-looking Haas so far, but that’s not by very high standards, and the antics of their title sponsor have done little to inspire affection for the thing.

Score: 6/10 – Smart enough, but could be smarter, and has a distasteful air over it

McLaren F1 Team

The 2017 car was really nicely designed but wasn’t the right shade of orange. The 2018 car was the right shade of orange but wasn’t very well-designed. This is the right shade of orange… and actually designed. It’s fantastic. The team have wisely made more of a feature of a shade of blue that counterpoints the orange beautifully, and laid it on with a smart triangle-based design arrangement. Better yet, although still lacking an actual proper Title Sponsor, there are at least enough logos all over the place that it doesn’t look like the disappointingly blank canvas of last year. Even the red rear wing, which I should hate for being clashy, kind of works – with a big bold logo that makes the car look a bit Indy-ish. And then there’s those uniforms! All around, this is a massive win.

Score: 10/10 – Gorgeous, the best orange McLaren yet and their best livery full stop since the early West days

SportPesa Racing Point F1 Team

Well, that “new era” turned out to be something of a damp squib – the 2019 livery is basically just the 2018 livery with new blue sections added to account for new title sponsor SportPesa. And… it doesn’t really work, frankly. We know that an electric deep blue and the BWT pink can work well together, because we’ve seen plenty of fan mockups that do just that – but somewhere along the way they’ve got this wrong. It feels like they should have committed more fully to the blue, maybe keeping the pink as an accent colour, because this just feels like a cut-and-shut job of two different liveries hacked together. And given that the 2018 car was already a bit of a broken-up mess (but one that just about made it work in a mid-90s kind of way), it just leaves the whole thing feeling neither one thing nor the other. I honestly wouldn’t be surprised if we see a change, with SportPesa taking over more prominently, before the season is out.

Score: 5/10 – It’s still nice to see the bold pink in the sport but this is a mess

Alfa Romeo Racing

The Sauber name may be gone, but their livery spirit lives on – and it’s baffling to me why the team have chosen to keep the boring white and blue front section of this livery, when it felt like a temporary job all the way back at the start of 2018. The metallic red is gorgeous and the adjustment of the Alfa logo compared with last year is an improvement, as is the extension of the red onto the halo – but I don’t understand why it hasn’t been allowed to take over the entire car. There’s a great livery in here just bursting to get out – maybe next year we’ll actually get to see it.

Score: 7/10 – Really nice colours but only half the car is pretty, the rest is dull

Red Bull Toro Rosso Honda

As you were for Toro Rosso, but honestly, did we ever want them to change? Not really, although I think around about now is the point where they could start to do something slightly different with the layout while keeping the utterly gorgeous colour scheme intact. With McLaren hitting an absolute home run with their livery, it could be said that this is only the joint-best livery on the grid this year, rather than the absolute best as it was for the previous two.

Score: 9/10 – For the first time, we’re knocking a point off for being identical to last year

ROKiT Williams Racing

I liked this more than most people seemed to at launch, but I have to admit that on track it’s not coming off as the most inspiring colour scheme – and given Williams’ current woes, it may yet end up being associated with the final decline of one of F1’s greatest teams. I still think the main blue colour is strong, even if the blurred/spraypaint effect where it blends into the white isn’t the best; and the red of new sponsor ROKiT could be better integrated into the livery itself rather than just being part of their logo. It also suffers from a problem the last couple of Martini liveries had, which is that too much of the car is in unpainted carbon – from the front view in particular, you can barely discern the livery, it looks like they’ve forgotten to paint the car.

Score: 5/10 – Wouldn’t be surprised if, one way or the other, this livery isn’t on the grid next season

So there we have it – and a bit of a surprise as, purely on points, the Toro Rosso doesn’t take the title this time around, thanks to an absolutely brilliant effort from McLaren. It remains to be seen whether performance on the track will live up to the livery quality (it’s McLaren, so… probably not)

There’s disappointment here and there, with a feeling that the likes of Haas, Alfa and Racing Point could be doing more with what they’ve got; but with particularly strong efforts from McLaren, Mercedes, Renault and Ferrari, the current trend for a colourful grid and a spirit of invention in the livery game remains very much alive. We’re looking forward to seeing how all of these look up against each other on the track in Melbourne next weekend!

As for the update on F1 Colours in general – well, don’t worry, the site’s not going anywhere any time soon. I certainly don’t want to stop writing on here, but it is a one-man-band operation done entirely in my spare time. I was finding myself under a bit of pressure and anxiety to get the launch updates done this year, which is partly what led to just throwing my hands up and not doing it at all. But what I have found is that I still enjoy commentating on designs and rumours as they happen on Twitter. So from now on, while I will still do an annual roundup (like this one) every year, I’m not going to bust a gut doing news and launch coverage as site posts any more. Things move too quickly, teams don’t tend to launch in the same staggered way that they did when the site launched in 2007, and social media has picked up the baton for a lot of the chatter that goes on around the pre-season.

With that in mind, I’ve also undertaken a bit of a review of the archive content on the site – if we’re not doing new news coverage any more then I don’t see the point in having an outdated news section any more either, so I’ve taken the archives of news and launch coverage down (does anyone really want to go back and read a story about Toyota’s 2008 launch?) I’m also in the process of reviewing some of the older feature content, to ensure that the site is on a sound legal footing when it comes to image use, so you may notice some posts either come down or change as this is worked through (I’ve also been taking the opportunity to do minor rewrites/corrections here and there!)

In short, the site will keep on going, new features will continue to be posted from time to time (as I get the chance to do them!) including a new Livery Histories entry (finally!) that’s being worked on as we speak. And I do still intend to remain active with commentary on Twitter – possibly even moreso than before. But if you’ve wondered why some older/less relevant posts have disappeared from view, why images have changed or why there’s no new launch coverage – that’s basically the long and short of it.

Hope you enjoy sticking with us whether you’re new to the site or have been around since 2007, and I’ll be bringing you more in the way of the classic F1 Colours livery content you know and love before too long!

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Energy Drinks and F1: A Chequered History https://f1colours.sebpatrick.co.uk/articles/energy-drinks-and-f1-a-chequered-history/ https://f1colours.sebpatrick.co.uk/articles/energy-drinks-and-f1-a-chequered-history/#comments Fri, 02 Nov 2018 13:00:16 +0000 https://f1colours.sebpatrick.co.uk/?p=3177 With the news that Rich Energy are set to sponsor Haas from 2019 onwards, we look back at the up and down history of energy drink sponsorship in F1 since the 1990s.

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Earlier this year, a little-known British energy drinks brand, Rich Energy, made waves when it pronounced itself as being on the verge of taking over the ailing Force India team. Although this supposed bid ultimately ended in confusion and acrimony – with the Racing Point consortium taking over and renaming the team, and Rich Energy’s bid dismissed as lacking substance – William Storey’s firm have refused to disappear: with the news last week that they are to become Haas’ new title sponsors for 2019. In the process, they’ll purportedly be painting the cars black and gold, in a similar fashion to the photoshopped image they Tweeted (having seemingly yanked it from a Lotus design by our old chum Sean Bull) back when the Force India rumours were around:

Whether or not this deal ends up actually happening – and if it does, if it ends up lasting – it’s the latest in a long line of energy drink partners getting involved with F1 teams. In some cases (well, one case) it’s a huge, internationally renowned brand buying not one, but two F1 teams and committing wholesale to them for well over a decade. But in other instances, a brand you’ve never heard of suddenly shows up on a sidepod for a few races and then disappears never to be heard from again. Indeed, if you’ve ever seen a random name on an F1 car and you’re not quite sure what the company does, then chances are, it’s a short-lived energy drink.

It’s unsurprising that the biggest energy drink brand in the world – the one that essentially brought the very concept to Western masses – is also the one with the longest history in F1. Red Bull were far from the massive corporate giant that they are now, however, when they first started sponsoring the Sauber team in 1995. Instead, they were an upstart young brand who were making waves through non-traditional and guerilla marketing efforts – and who saw F1 as a good way to further draw attention to themselves.

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Their first F1 livery is still one of the best they’ve had – a smart dark blue effort that pushed their brand prominently without any real competition. But from 1996 onwards, they were forced to share the limelight at Sauber with Petronas, who brought their distinctive turquoise onto the car. Red Bull remained title sponsor through 2001, but were somewhat overshadowed in terms of identification with the team by Petronas’ badging of Sauber’s Ferrari engine deal from 1997 onwards. So it was perhaps unsurprising that they reduced their involvement with the team from 2002 onwards.

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Not least because they had also moved into individual driver sponsorship, having founded a driver development programme at the turn of the century. Having started to bring drivers up to F1 via their “Red Bull Junior Team” (a rebranding of RSM Marko) in Formula 3000, their branding made it onto the Arrows of Enrique Bernoldi in 2001 and 2002, and Christian Klien’s Jaguar in 2004.

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In 2005, of course, they purchased the latter team – in the process ending their Sauber deal – and the rest is history. Despite initial scepticism over whether or not they would stick it out, they turned the Milton Keynes-based squad into one of the most successful and enduring F1 teams of the modern era, winning consecutive drivers and constructors championship doubles between 2010 and 2013. And they bought the ailing Minardi team at the end of 2005, turning them into their secondary Scuderia Toro Rosso outfit which has similarly endured.

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So it’s perhaps not surprising that other energy drinks brands have looked at Red Bull and decided they might want a piece of F1 themselves. And actually, while Red Bull’s sponsorship of Sauber began at the start of 1995, it was later that same season that another brand began a long association with the sport, in the shape of Hype Energy.

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Hype was launched in 1994 by one of the founders of the Hard Rock Cafe, and made its first appearance on an F1 car in 1995, taking over a significant part of the Arrows (Footwork) car from the Portugese Grand Prix onwards.

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For 1996, however, Hype set their sights further up the grid – and nabbed a smaller, but more prestigious, slot on the barge boards of the then-constructors’ champions, Benetton. And the following year, they sponsored that year’s reigning champions, in exactly the same place on the side of the Williams; and with the same strategy of using a bright fluorescent colour that was totally at odds with the rest of the livery and had the presumably desired effect of making people go “What the hell is this Hype thing?”

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By the end of 1997, however, Hype had left the paddock, concentrating on other areas of motorsport instead. But their association with F1 didn’t end there, as former Jordan driver Bertrand Gachot got involved with their distribution, eventually becoming the company’s CEO. In 2014, he got them back into the sport by way of a deal with Caterham driver Andre Lotterer – and the following year, they began to sponsor Force India, which they continue to do to this day.

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It’s worth noting, incidentally, that Hype only became available to buy here in the UK earlier this year. Indeed, non-availability in many of the countries that watch the sport is often a recurring theme for energy drinks brands that get into F1. Take Power Horse, one of the earliest competitors to Red Bull. They entered F1 during that same mid-90s heyday – in fact, they replaced Hype as a sponsor of the Arrows team in 1996, having debuted earlier that year briefly on the Ligier.

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Arrows had two different liveries in ’96 – they switched to an all over red and blue scheme when TWR took over fully – but although Power Horse were a prominent sponsor, neither livery was based around their silver and red colour scheme. The same was true in 1997, when Arrows switched to a white and blue livery, with Danka as their title sponsor. Power Horse continued to sponsor the team with a prominent rear wing slot – but dropped out partway through the season amid rumours of financial difficulties.

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The brand still exists, but is not generally available in the UK. Amusingly, Power Horse also had a corner named after it at the Osterreichring, during the 1996-2003 period when it was known as the A1-Ring. Unsurprisingly, the name did not continue when Red Bull bought the circuit.

1997 seems to have been the peak year for energy drink products appearing on cars – as, along with Red Bull on the Sauber, Hype on the Williams and Power Horse on the Arrows, there was another tie-up – NRG, who had a small sponsorship deal with Tyrrell for that year only. Like Red Bull and Power Horse, NRG hailed from Austria – but they were a much shorter-lived venture and seem to have disappeared by around the turn of the century.

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Meanwhile, maybe there was just something about the Arrows team that made energy drinks want to sponsor them, but there was a fifth such brand that made an appearance on their cars between the mid-1990s and their 2002 demise. This one, however, was a doozy. It all began in 1999, when Nigerian Prince Malik Ado Ibrahim bought a 25% stake in the team. As part of his marketing efforts, he came up with a brand called T-Minus, which was initially trailed mysteriously via a “countdown” on the cars’ sidepods over the course of several races.

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When it was finally unveiled, it transpired that T-Minus was intended as a brand that could be licensed and applied to products by other partners. Whether or not it was actually a viable enterprise, we would never really find out – as Ibrahim, and the brand, had disappeared from F1 before the season was out. In the process, pretty much the only product that had ever made it out into the world with the T-Minus label on it was… you guessed it, an energy drink.

T-Minus wasn’t the only short-lived F1 related energy drink to make it into the world, either. In 2001, Eddie Jordan was emboldened by his team’s successes both on the track and in marketing over the preceding few years, and spun off his brand into a drink named EJ-10 (although curiously, the car of the same name had actually already finished competing, having run in the 2000 season). As with T-Minus, Jordan’s intent was that the name and branding could be applied across a wide range of different products licensed by other partners.

While it was initially successful, however, the drink’s launch coincided with a downturn in Jordan’s fortunes both on and off the track. They lost their famous Benson & Hedges title sponsorship (although the brand would still appear on the car in reduced form for a few more seasons), and were embroiled in a court case with Vodafone over a deal that was purportedly designed to replace it. Suddenly, having a vanity brand on the car looked less like the work of a team on the up, and more like one desperately filling space. In 2003 and 2004, the cars carried the branding of the spinoff drink V-10 (essentially an EJ-10 and vodka cocktail) but the writing was on the wall.

EJ-10’s failure didn’t put off other teams from trying to launch their own brands, though: and when Tony Fernandes’ newly-founded Lotus team pitched up in 2010, they quickly tried to branch out into the energy drink field as well. LR8 was the name of their “all natural” energy drink (named for “Lotus Racing” and the eight ingredients, apparently). Despite sharing a can design with one of my favourite ever car liveries, however, the brand quickly hit a snag, thanks to the dispute over the use of the name “Lotus”.

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While the team were still called Lotus in 2011, Fernandes moved quickly to rebrand the energy drink, with his team’s cars carrying the new brand EQ8 (no, I don’t know what it stands for either) for the next two seasons. EQ8 actually proved quite successful, making it onto UK high street shelves – but as Caterham began to struggle financially in late 2013 and 2014, the brand seemed to gradually disappear. It had a small presence on the first iteration of the 2014 Caterham livery, and also served as naming sponsor for Caterham’s GP2 outfit; but was nowhere to be seen once Fernandes sold the team later in the year.

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A rather more successful drinks brand, Lucozade, had a brief flirtation with F1 in the early 2010s, sponsoring McLaren between late 2011 and 2013. Their logo alternated rear wing space with the team’s title sponsors Vodafone, and given that it came so soon after Red Bull won their first title, it’s hard not to see the linkup as a deliberate bit of spoiling. Unfortunately for Lucozade, though, the sponsorship coincided with a significant dip in McLaren’s form, and when the team launched their Vodafone-less silver and black livery at the start of 2014, Lucozade were similarly nowhere to be seen.

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Of the various energy drink brands that have proven consistent competitors to Red Bull rather than flash in the pans in recent years, Monster Energy are perhaps the most prominent, with a marketing portfolio across a variety of different sports. They began sponsoring Mercedes in 2010, but stepped up their involvement once Lewis Hamilton joined the team.

Interestingly, Monster don’t position themselves so much as a sponsor of the Mercedes team, as they do of the drivers individually – Hamilton prominently, and Bottas almost kind of by extension/default – and they don’t brand on the cars themselves, only on the drivers’ helmets and uniforms. They’re a popular brand for fan livery designers to base cars on, though, and we wouldn’t be completely surprised if they stepped up their involvement to become a major title sponsor – if not of Mercedes then potentially elsewhere – in future years.

It’s clear, then, that Rich Energy are looking to improve their standing in a crowded market, by getting visibility in an area where two of the biggest players are (in one case extremely) prominent. Will they be another Red Bull, or another T-Minus? Haas obviously believe in them, having elected to give up title sponsorship of the team for the first time, but scepticism over their role in the Force India saga remains. Either way, we’ll find out next year…

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Catching Up: Mercedes, Ferrari, Toro Rosso https://f1colours.sebpatrick.co.uk/launches/catching-up-mercedes-ferrari-toro-rosso/ https://f1colours.sebpatrick.co.uk/launches/catching-up-mercedes-ferrari-toro-rosso/#comments Fri, 23 Feb 2018 12:48:57 +0000 https://f1colours.sebpatrick.co.uk/?p=3138 Okay, so there’s a McLaren to talk about. But before we get to that, let’s do things in the proper order and discuss the liveries that were launched yesterday. First up, it’s Ferrari, and a bit of a change in that with the departure of Santander, there’s now almost no white on the livery: I’m not sure quite how sold I am on red wings on a Ferrari – it looked good in 2007, but that was with the bold and striking Marlboro branding still in place. Here, the big empty red areas – especially on the rear wing and engine cover – just make it look like something’s missing. If you’re going to have big empty panels on your car, it surely makes sense to mask it by having different colours placed there – and in Ferrari’s case, it’ll always feel slightly lacking to me if it doesn’t also have predominant black and yellow. Love the little Scuderia badge at the top of the halo, though. Over at reigning champions Mercedes, meanwhile, it’s (unsurprisingly) pretty much business as usual, albeit with some tweaks here and there: The Petronas branding has had its annual tweak, this time making the fibre-optic [...]

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Okay, so there’s a McLaren to talk about. But before we get to that, let’s do things in the proper order and discuss the liveries that were launched yesterday.

First up, it’s Ferrari, and a bit of a change in that with the departure of Santander, there’s now almost no white on the livery:

I’m not sure quite how sold I am on red wings on a Ferrari – it looked good in 2007, but that was with the bold and striking Marlboro branding still in place. Here, the big empty red areas – especially on the rear wing and engine cover – just make it look like something’s missing. If you’re going to have big empty panels on your car, it surely makes sense to mask it by having different colours placed there – and in Ferrari’s case, it’ll always feel slightly lacking to me if it doesn’t also have predominant black and yellow.

Love the little Scuderia badge at the top of the halo, though.

Over at reigning champions Mercedes, meanwhile, it’s (unsurprisingly) pretty much business as usual, albeit with some tweaks here and there:

The Petronas branding has had its annual tweak, this time making the fibre-optic style swooshy patterns even more marked. But in the process, the volume of turquoise on the sidepod has decreased further, and I think I always prefer these cars when they’ve got more of it. The amount of black has been toned down as well, and while once again we see race numbers at the rear of the engine cover (it’s definitely an agreed trend, isn’t it?) I really don’t think the newly white-out 77 stands out the way the blue one did last year. Here’s hoping Lewis’ #44 is still going to be in red.

And finally, while they haven’t had an official launch yet, Toro Rosso have responded to a leaked photo from their filming day by releasing an official one:

… and it confirms that the 2018 car will basically look exactly the same as the 2017 one (albeit now with Honda logos). Which, given that last year’s was one of the best liveries ever, is fine and dandy by us.

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2017: Scuderia Toro Rosso https://f1colours.sebpatrick.co.uk/best-liveries-ever/2017-scuderia-toro-rosso/ https://f1colours.sebpatrick.co.uk/best-liveries-ever/2017-scuderia-toro-rosso/#respond Mon, 19 Feb 2018 21:51:15 +0000 https://f1colours.sebpatrick.co.uk/?p=3115 In a year that was filled with striking new liveries, this one still managed to be head and shoulders above the rest. Metallic blue and red alone might have been enough to clinch it, but it was the silver sponsor logos that really pushed it over the top. For Toro Rosso to finally ditch the bull painting that they’d had for their first decade in the sport, it needed to be replaced with something equally memorable: mission accomplished.

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In a year that was filled with striking new liveries, this one still managed to be head and shoulders above the rest. Metallic blue and red alone might have been enough to clinch it, but it was the silver sponsor logos that really pushed it over the top. For Toro Rosso to finally ditch the bull painting that they’d had for their first decade in the sport, it needed to be replaced with something equally memorable: mission accomplished.

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What to Expect in 2018 https://f1colours.sebpatrick.co.uk/news/what-to-expect-in-2018/ https://f1colours.sebpatrick.co.uk/news/what-to-expect-in-2018/#comments Fri, 05 Jan 2018 13:41:38 +0000 https://f1colours.sebpatrick.co.uk/?p=3086 What do we think 2018's grid is going to look like? Based on teases, announcements, guesswork and speculation, here's our team-by-team run through our expectations.

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Happy new year! It still only feels like a few minutes since the 2017 F1 season finished, but here we are looking forwards to the new season.

F1 launch patterns have shifted quite a bit in the past few years – when we first launched this site in 2007, it wasn’t unusual to get several launches in January, but nowadays it’s not considered likely to see anyone’s new car or livery until close to the first days of testing in February.

But to get everyone in the mood, and based on admittedly somewhat limited information, we thought we’d take a run through what we reckon we can expect from the various teams this year.

For 2018, there are a few major sponsor changes already announced – and possibly more still to come – and of course teams will also have to take into consideration such factors as the new Halo head protection and (with a full season to plan for it) the number and name display regulations.

With the caveat that it’s always possible for someone to spring a surprise (as multiple teams delightfully did last year, then, here are some team-by-team thoughts.

Sauber

Sauber stole a march on everyone by suddenly announcing at the beginning of December not only their tie-up with Alfa Romeo, not only their 2018 driver line-up, but also a revised livery. While the colours used are not without their charm – putting us in mind of the unused Force India test car – the application itself is (in true Sauber fashion) a bit bland and flat, especially after the delight that was their 2017 car. So here’s hoping when the car actually comes to rolling out, it’s had a bit more work done to the paint job. Of course, this is Sauber, so chances are this is exactly what we’ll see.

Mercedes

There’s no reason to expect a change in approach from Mercedes this year – the car will likely be silver, black and turquoise yet again. They do mix it up slightly each year, but we’d be amazed if there were any major alterations this time around. Hopefully they keep the different-coloured race numbers for Hamilton and Bottas, as that was a nice touch.

Ferrari

Ferrari have lost the sponsorship of Santander, which may mean a significant reduction in the amount of white on the car – although they are still technically supported by Marlboro so don’t expect to see it disappear entirely, nor for the shade of red to go back to a darker one. But if we got back black wings? We’d be happy with that.

Incidentally, Ferrari are the only team so far to announce a launch date for their 2018 car: they’ll do so on 22nd February.

Red Bull

Excitingly, Red Bull have got a new title sponsor in the shape of Aston Martin – although it’s somewhat confusing that the team that’s named after a drinks company now has a car company as a non-technical sponsor. The big question is whether RBR will simply work the Aston logo into their existing blue colour scheme, or if they’ll do something dramatic and pick from one of Aston’s classic sets of racing colours. Despite the fact that we like the matt blue job they’ve had for the past couple of years, we’d very much like to see them do the latter, especially if it involves green.

Toro Rosso

Worryingly, Toro Rosso have officially added “Red Bull” as a sponsor name on the entry list this year – which may mean that the company will be compensating for the presence of Aston Martin over at the other team by increasing their branding on the junior squad. Given that the 2017 Toro Rosso was one of the most beautiful cars of the modern era, it would be a real shame if they went back to traditional Red Bull blue, red and yellow. Fingers crossed it’s just about the name and we basically get the same car again this year.

Force India

The pink BWT car was fantastic in theory but slightly disappointing in execution – maybe due to the rushed way in which it came out. Hopefully this time around we’ll see something that’s had a bit more time spent on it, and a bolder shade of pink. There could possibly be more blue involved this year, too. Either way, the main hope is that they sort out doing the race numbers properly this time…

McLaren

McLaren delighted us by going orange last year – but it wasn’t enough for some fans, who wanted a more traditional shade and scheme, a feeling that was only enhanced by the classic look of Fernando Alonso’s Indy 500 entry. The good news is that the team have hinted that they could shift to the “papaya” orange for 2018, with Zak Brown – a man who really does seem actually interested in liveries and what people think of them – saying “I think the fans want us to go to papaya orange. When we did the IndyCar we had an overwhelming amount of ‘please make your F1 car like that’, so we are waiting on a few sponsor decisions which can also dictate what a car looks like.”

But is it too much to hope that Alonso switches to using that wonderful retro helmet design, too…?

Williams

Until we hear otherwise, it looks like Williams are sticking with their Martini deal for at least another year – so Williams being Williams, expect the car to look extremely similar again.

Renault

Having landed on a pretty strong and “Renault-ish” livery for 2017, it would be surprising if the team moved heavily away from it this year – they probably have other things on their mind, to be honest. We’d love to see white introduced as a third main colour to take them properly back to their 1980s roots, but otherwise we have no real complaints with how the car looks these days.

Haas

Anyone’s guess, really, given that the team decided to change their 2017 livery partway through the season to something bland and grey and white. Maybe we’ll get something more exciting this year – they pretty much have a blank canvas to do what they want, given the lack of sponsor pressures – but I’d be wary of making any serious predictions.

Those are our thoughts – what do you reckon? Anything you particularly want to see on the grid this year, or any developments we’ve missed? Let us know!

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Fantasy 2018 Grid – by Daniel Crossman https://f1colours.sebpatrick.co.uk/articles/fantasy-2018-grid-by-daniel-crossman/ https://f1colours.sebpatrick.co.uk/articles/fantasy-2018-grid-by-daniel-crossman/#comments Tue, 21 Nov 2017 21:39:30 +0000 https://f1colours.sebpatrick.co.uk/?p=3071 In a change from the usual type of "fantasy next year" roundup we usually do, we're spotlighting one particular designer - with an entire grid's worth of his creations!

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As the 2017 F1 season prepares to draw to a close, for many (especially with the titles already settled) thoughts are starting to turn to 2018. And that’s especially true when it comes to liveries – indeed, those of us who are interested in them, and those who design fantasy versions, are almost perpetually thinking forwards as soon as the existing cars have been revealed.

In the past we’ve done roundups of fan-created livery designs looking to the next year, but this time around, rather than gathering the work of several different artists on the same teams, we’re looking at just one artist who’s gone particularly above and beyond in terms of visualising the 2018 season.

Daniel Crossman is one of our favourite up-and-coming designers (we hesitate to say “fan designer” or “amateur designer” about the likes of Daniel and Sean Bull, because that overlooks the fact that they do actually do professional design work within motorsport) and he’s one of several who are turning out designs that are more immediately fan-pleasing than the ones that we often see on actual cars.

(Incidentally, we know that fantasy designers are, of course, not subject to the same design considerations as the designers of actual working team liveries – so when we say a design looks “better” than the one on an actual car, we say it with the knowledge that there might be reasons why this the case beyond simple aesthetic decisions. We also say it, in this particular instance, in the knowledge that 2017 was a vintage year for excellent F1 liveries almost entirely across the board.)

Anyway, Daniel has not just done a few different concepts for the 2018 season – he’s worked out multiple possible designs for every team on the grid. Some of these are based on rumours about new sponsorship linkups are rebrand, and others are from the realm of pure fantasy – but what they all are is excellent. So we’ve decided to go through each team that he’s done a portfolio for, and pick out our favourite – to make a complete Fantasy 2018 Grid designed entirely by him. And we’ve even included one of his designs for a non-existent “returning” team, just to add an eleventh car to the grid.

Note that some of these designs don’t take into account driver and engine changes that have happened since they were done!

MERCEDES

Keeping it simple, what’s good about this Mercedes design is that it strips back the amount of black that has crept onto the car in recent years. It’s understandable that the Petronas turquoise needs to be on there, but the original “Silver Arrows” identity has been somewhat lost of late, and restricting the black area to the shark fin is a good way of dealing with it.

FERRARI

Like us, Daniel clearly hankers after the days when the secondary colour on a (darker red) Ferrari was black, rather than white. The team may not have been massively successful in the early ’90s, but the cars were at their best-looking ever, and we’d love to see a Scuderia livery that homages that.

RED BULL

Well, this is a biggie. It’s not considered all that likely that Red Bull will actually completely change their colour scheme to match the new Aston Martin title sponsorship – but as this design shows, it would be absolutely flipping amazing if they did. I’m not generally a fan of fluorescent colours on F1 cars, but I do like this Brawn-style yellow, and it goes so well with the black and classic racing green.

FORCE INDIA

The bold and striking pink BWT livery got Force India a lot of headlines in 2017, and I hope they stick with the concept going forward. But equally, it was a bit of a rush job, and it would be nice to see it evolved into something a bit more deeply thought-out this time – and to go for a richer shade of pink than the slightly washed-out look of the 2017 car. Daniel’s other Force India concepts made use of black as a secondary colour, but I really like the bold step of mixing blue in with this one.

WILLIAMS

Gasp! It’s not Martini! That’s because, as we’ll see later, I’ve constructed this grid on the premise of Williams losing their prestige sponsor at the end of this year. Largely because, while it’s still a lovely livery, it would just be nice to see something done a bit different – both with Martini, and with Williams. A red Williams (calling back to 1998) would be fantastic, but I doubt that’ll happen – so let’s instead have them look to their glory years with a terrific blue and yellow ’80s/early ’90s inspired design.

TORO ROSSO

Let’s face it, there’s not very much that needs to be improved upon with this livery. Daniel has another concept that sees white introduced as a major colour, but I prefer sticking with the Prost-style metallic blue and red, and just shuffling the pattern of the colours around a bit. It looks fundamentally the same, but I really like the idea of splitting the colours behind the bull on the engine cover.

RENAULT

Renault have got the colours right these days, but could possibly stand to apply them in a more interesting way. Taking inspiration from the fantastic striped 2010 car – with more than a bit of Buzzin’ Hornets Jordan in the mix too – this one does the job just fine.

HAAS

It’s not that a grey and white car is inherently a bad idea, it’s just that the 2017 Haas was so dull with it. This is an improvement not just by shifting more towards silver – brightening the whole thing up generally – but also giving a bit more of an American identity with the subtle stars and stripes.

McLAREN

I love that McLaren actually went orange for 2017 so much that I don’t even mind that they didn’t go the whole hog with it. But it’s hard to deny that the fully orange IndyCar that Alonso raced was far more striking than the F1 team’s livery. Daniel hasn’t designed a fully orange McLaren – maybe because it’s not that much of an artistic exercise! – so of his concepts, I’ve picked the one that’s closest to that. Really, though, I’d be happy with one that left out the black almost entirely, and had the logos and race numbers in blue, to give a truly 1960s Bruce McLaren feel (such as with this one of Sean Bull’s).

SAUBER

We’d be more than happy for Sauber to keep their fantastic 2017 livery, but on the other hand… well, just look at what Daniel’s done here. It’s a bit of a leap based on the possibility of Alfa Romeo becoming involved with the team – he also did some white, Alitalia-sponsored designs that are well worth a look – and thus tempting over Martini to recreate a truly classic late 1970s look. Well, wouldn’t you want to see this on the grid?

STEWART

Because, well, why not? And because with the Martini Williams gone, we don’t have a white car within this set. Stewart’s first couple of liveries were a bit muggy, with a cream shade of white and slightly boring application of the tartan, but they switched to a much sharper and brighter look for 1999. I was never really disappointed that we didn’t see it after that season because it was immediately replaced by the green Jaguar – but that doesn’t mean it wouldn’t be nice to see it make a comeback. Question is, would they factory-share with Red Bull, or what…?

Check out more of Daniel’s work on Behance, and keep an eye on our Twitter for more of our favourite fantasy designs!

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Toro Rosso Save The Best For Last https://f1colours.sebpatrick.co.uk/launches/toro-rosso-save-the-best-for-last/ https://f1colours.sebpatrick.co.uk/launches/toro-rosso-save-the-best-for-last/#comments Sun, 26 Feb 2017 19:42:21 +0000 https://f1colours.sebpatrick.co.uk/?p=3020 Wow. Wowzers. And wow again.

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Wow. Wowzers. And wow again.

We heard they were going to do a new livery. We thought it might involve Sugar Free Red Bull branding somehow. It didn’t. But it’s better.

This is just fantastic. An incredibly vivid, striking shade of metallic blue that will instantly pop out at any track it visits (something that’s especially relevant given what I wrote just a few hours ago about the Haas). Even more vivid red detail that pops out. And the Red Bull logo – not to mention the other sponsor names – picked out in bright silver.

It actually reminds me of one of my favourite ever liveries – the 2001 Prost – with its combination of metallic blue and red, but it’s arguably better, because it’s got a more unified design aesthetic. And just imagine what it’s going to look like under the lights of Singapore. It probably helps that the STR has one of the best design profiles of any of the ten chassis we’ve seen for this season – it’s got a shark fin, but one that actually looks cool and racey, and it doesn’t have a stupid stub nose either – but even on a dog of a car this would look good.

Of course, this means that we now have to say goodbye to the famous Toro Rosso bull, which has adorned every one of their cars (albeit in a much smaller profile over the last few years) since they arrived in 2006. We’ve said many times on the site that it was time for them to move on – and we feel vindicated by the fact that they’ve done so in such spectacular fashion – but we’d be lying if we said we didn’t feel slightly sad at saying goodbye to this piece of livery history. So let’s have a look at it one last time:

Embed from Getty Images

Huh. A shark fin. How about that.

 

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Toro Rosso: Sugar Free? https://f1colours.sebpatrick.co.uk/news/toro-rosso-sugar-free/ https://f1colours.sebpatrick.co.uk/news/toro-rosso-sugar-free/#comments Thu, 16 Feb 2017 21:31:36 +0000 https://f1colours.sebpatrick.co.uk/?p=2971 Okay, this is getting crazy. It's mind-boggling enough that McLaren might actually be switching to an orange livery this year... but now we're hearing chatter that Toro Rosso might also be making a change.

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Okay, this is getting crazy. It’s mind-boggling enough that McLaren might actually be switching to an orange livery this year (and incidentally, the latest issue of F1 Racing goes as close to confirming it as you could hope for)… but now we’re hearing chatter that Toro Rosso, who’ve had basically the same livery for the entirety of this site’s life, might also be making a change.

And not just any change. Us livery fans have been clamouring for a light blue “Sugar Free” variant pretty much ever since the team came into the sport, and people have been mocking them up for years (the one at the head of this post is a classic example, by an artist called Jezson, aka Jez Hancox, but I did a much more ham-fisted one myself in 2012, too) but I’m not sure anyone ever seriously expected that it might happen. Only it turns out, according to F1 blogger Joe Saward, that it might finally be on the table. Joe writes:

There are now suggestions coming out of Italy that Scuderia Toro Rosso is going to switch from the dark blue that it has used to a new lighter colour, which will help to sell Red Bull’s sugar-free product, as opposed to its usual drink.  This has existed since 2003  and has all the same ingredients of Red Bull except sugar, which is replaced by sweeteners. It is still only a small part of the overall Red Bull sales which amounted to $43 billion in 2015. The company has a 30 percent share of the global energy drink market and as such is obviously likely to be a target for sugar-free campaigns and such things as taxes on sugar-sweetened beverages, based on the links between sugar and heart disease. This debate seems to be ramping up and so drinks companies are responding by trying to build more sales of sugar-free products.

Take this, of course, with a pinch of aspartame. But this is the closest indication we’ve ever had that one of the longest-serving fan livery ideas could yet become a reality – and if it happened the same year as McLaren’s much-vaunted touch of brightness… well, 2017 could turn out to be an unexpectedly classic livery year.

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Renault Give the Grid Some Colour https://f1colours.sebpatrick.co.uk/launches/renault-give-the-grid-some-colour/ https://f1colours.sebpatrick.co.uk/launches/renault-give-the-grid-some-colour/#comments Wed, 16 Mar 2016 18:15:02 +0000 https://f1colours.sebpatrick.co.uk/?p=2639 Well, it's yellow. The question is, did they always intend to do this? And if so, why did they bother with that black version in the first place?

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Well, it’s yellow.

renaultyellow-1

It’s not perfect, I have to say. They’ve gone for an obviously Red Bull-inspired matte paint job which looks fantastic in certain light, and slightly underwhelming in others – in fact, in the main studio shots, it actually looks like a slightly dull gold, reminiscent of the earlier variant of the ’96 Jordan. And they haven’t really introduced anything in the way of design to it, except for the hexagonal shapes that were already on the black version.

renaultyellow-5

But in the launch photos (hopefully more representative of how it’ll look in the wild, especially under the lights of Singapore) it does look rather more striking; and aside from anything else, the simple fact is that this is a bright and colourful livery that’s unlike anything else on the grid, and for that we have to applaud it. And while it’s not as good as the 2010 Renault, at least the Total logo isn’t in red this time.

renaultyellow-2 renaultyellow-3
The question is, did they always intend to do this? And if so, why did they bother with that black version (which I’d actually argue, in and of itself, is a smarter livery – but simply couldn’t be allowed to stand given the number of other dark cars around this season) in the first place? Given that they’ve gone for the matte look, I can’t help but feel that this is a reaction to how things have gone since they launched the first version, and the underwhelming reaction they initially got, rather than something that was always on the cards.

renaultyellow-4

But if it is, you know what? I don’t care. I actually like that they’ve responded in this way, rather than waiting out a whole season (in much the same way as McLaren, to give them credit, did with their 2015 car). And this feeling is strengthened by the comments made by Cyril Abiteboule in the aftermath:

After declaring that its bold colours were a sign of a bigger push to do things differently in 2016, its F1 chief Cyril Abiteboul has revealed that it is evaluating some radical steps with the looks of its car over the season.

Speaking about the motivation for the new yellow livery, Abiteboul told Motorsport.com: “We want to create a little bit of a talking point and buzz, so expect to see that sort of thing to be played with.

“The car is a fantastic platform. It is a billboard and I am just surprised that people don’t play more with it.

“I know that there are rules and you are not supposed to change too much – but we are going to push that. It is such an obvious and cheap thing to do when you want people to talk about it.”

Abiteboul said that Renault felt it important to move away from the corporate grey and black colours that had been adopted by rival teams, as he suggested rivals were not making the most of opportunities.

“Frankly F1 cars are ugly,” he said. “I am ashamed by what we are doing.

“And frankly some teams are doing even worse than the regulations are driving us to do from a performance perspective. So we wanted also to be just good looking.”

When asked why he felt liveries were so dull now, Abiteboul said: “I think it is because everyone wants to tell a story about being premium. And if you want to be premium, the obvious thing to do is to be on the dark grey-ish side.

“Plus you have the teams that will obviously be dark grey or silver like Mercedes and McLaren. So that is already two. And there are a number of teams that want to do the same.

“So, I don’t know why really people are not going a bit more bullish with their colours. It is like they want to disappear. We don’t want to disappear, it is a statement and there is no hideaway. We will have to deal with what we do on track.”

Abiteboul suggested that tweaks to Renault’s colours could come as early as the Bahrain Grand Prix, because the team was still working out how well the matte yellow it has chosen works on television and in images.

“It might happen as soon as race two because we are not 100% sure yet of the reaction and how it looks under different lights,” he said. “Adjustment is something that we are allowed to think on. But we would want to do more.

“I am thinking one good example is the BMW Art Car. Everyone will remember BMW for their fantastic cars: It is a fantastic platform and I am amazed that no one is making better use of that. Small things; small details – but why not?”

We couldn’t agree more, Cyril. And now that we have all the liveries, we can do our delayed 2016 roundup (including the Toro Rosso, which – er – we haven’t mentioned because they never really unveiled it, just started running with it in testing one day and it was basically exactly the same as before, right?), so look out for that hopefully before qualifying starts on Saturday morning. Hopefully.

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Launch Roundup: Ferrari, Mercedes, Toro Rosso https://f1colours.sebpatrick.co.uk/launches/launch-roundup-ferrari-mercedes-toro-rosso/ https://f1colours.sebpatrick.co.uk/launches/launch-roundup-ferrari-mercedes-toro-rosso/#comments Sun, 01 Feb 2015 18:47:02 +0000 https://f1colours.sebpatrick.co.uk/?p=2233 So, as you can probably imagine, we were a bit busy with our own new livery job yesterday to look at the new cars that have begun to make their way onto the track in advance of - and during - this week's testing. But let's take the opportunity now to have a look at the three cars that, rather unsurprisingly, have been painted almost identically to last year...

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So, as you can probably imagine, we were a bit busy with our own new livery job yesterday to look at the new cars that have begun to make their way onto the track in advance of – and during – this week’s testing. But let’s take the opportunity now to have a look at the three cars that, rather unsurprisingly, have been painted almost identically to last year…

merc15-1 merc15-2 merc15-3
Let’s start with the world champions: Mercedes had already made some minor tweaks to their 2014 livery between launch and the last race of last season (switching the turqoise strip on the front wing from the top half to the bottom half, and moving the AMG logo down from the airbox) and so the 2015 car has very much a minor evolution of the livery that was seen at Abu Dhabi. The main changes are that Epson are added to the rear wing endplate, and the black area on the engine cover is a bit more solid and pronounced. It’s also nice to see that the turquoise on the sidepod is now shifted to be entirely behind the Petronas logo, rather than skirting around it – which is something I’ve always wanted them to do.

It’s a shame that the rumours of them switching to an entirely silver livery turned out to be false, but I still like how the turqoise and silver go together, so while this is a little dull, it’s fine.

Over at Ferrari, it is of course also business as usual:

ferrari15-1 ferrari15-2
Most attention will be on the fact that they now have a decent nose tip, rather than anything to do with the livery. It’s nearly identical to last year, with the main change being around the rear of the car – the black section now swoops back out to the exhaust rather than curving straight to the bottom part of the sidepod, and it also fits better with the car’s lines along the side of the nose. Other than that, the main difference is that Alfa Romeo’s logo now appears where parent company Fiat’s previously did.

And with Toro Rosso, too, the changes are to be squinted for rather than being immediately obvious:

str15-1 str15-2 str15-3
The gold and red stripes on the top of the sidepods and sides of the nose cone are in a slightly different layout from last year, but it’s only a very minor tweak. The other interesting point is that despite having a more traditionally F1-style nose this year, they’ve kept the tip of it blue rather than painting the whole thing gold. It looks a little odd, to be honest, and they might have been better off going back to the original design. But otherwise, this is a very nice-looking car that once again just suffers from being so similar to previous years. I know the painted bull is a major part of their identity, and I know I say this every year, but wouldn’t it be nice to see something a bit different on there now?

Finally, it’s worth noting that Red Bull have rolled out their 2015 car in a dedicated testing livery – a “camouflage” black and white paint job that’s seemingly intended to mask the specific lines of the car as much as possible so rival teams can’t get a proper look:

redbullcamo

It’s absolutely mental, and it would be insane if it were in any way reflective of what their 2015 livery will actually be – but I’d love it if it somehow were.

Oh, and one more thing: the talk out of today’s testing is that Ron Dennis has claimed that at some point either before or during the upcoming season, McLaren’s livery “will change”. If you can imagine me making an incredibly sceptical face, do so now.

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