A road trip through the peaceful valley of Franschhoek is long overdue, and this weekend offers the perfect excuse.
“Surreal and staggering” is how Joff van Reenen, Lead Auctioneer at Creative Rides, describes the moment he first stepped into the barn in the Eastern Cape filled to the brim with classic cars collecting dust for decades.
This Classic is somewhere in between Range Rover’s more hardy and primitive original and today’s luxury Range Rovers with all the frills to boot.
Vintage cars are beautiful, but they’re also fuel guzzlers, which is why people are now converting them to run on electricity.
Classic cars in South Africa are making their mark as a lucrative investment strategy, but just which ones could make you millions? Here we go.
I met this kid the other day – Milan is his name – and he said he does car reviews. I yawned, as they’re invariably all the same formula. Boy was I wrong.
Unlike us mere mortals, whose vehicles tend to devalue with time, certain classic cars are fetching a very pretty penny as demand grows.
In what is finally a bit of good news coming out France two car aficionados have come across an incredible vintage car collection in the most unusual place. This includes a rather valuable Ferrari.
Some rich guy (or girl) just purchased a super rare 1967 Ferrari for $27,5 million (R279,034,843.84) and set a world record! The Ferrari 275 GTB/4*S N.A.R.T. Spider was sold on Saturday night in Monterey, California, and makes it the most expensive road car ever sold at an auction.
Like a hipster to a Sunday clothing market at an art-house cinema, many, many car enthusiasts are drawn to the vintage car market. It’s a wonderful place. Searching for that rare MG convertible, finding an example that still goes and stops without endangering your life, and taking it home to care for it and love it for the rest of your days is… The worst idea you will ever have. And I’ll tell you why. Vintage cars are shit.