The global magazine and marketplace for classic car enthusiasts, by enthusiasts.
The global magazine and marketplace for classic car enthusiasts, by enthusiasts.
We smiled when we came across this Cabriolet model pictured alongside a bottle of Dom Pérignon to show the proportions of the car. But what is this piece of art doing for sale on our online marketplace? An original hand-built model by the designers and craftsmen at Figoni et Falaschi?! We were very interested to find out and asked the seller for more information.
He could tell us that this original model was designed to complement the Teardrop Coupé that the Parisian firm Figoni et Falaschi had already created for the Talbot-Lago T150-C SS chassis. This highly detailed Cabriolet model was handmade in 1937 at Figoni et Falaschi in wood and metal. The (original) paint applied to the model is the exact automotive paint used on one of only three stunning Cabriolets built the following year by the French coachbuilder. Initially, this colour was proposed for the first of the three Cabriolets (the prototype created by Joseph Figoni himself and built for display at a Parisian concours with chassis 90111). However, it was used instead on the second car with chassis 90019/90115 (chassis 90019 and 90115 had their serial numbers swapped sometime after the war). As can be seen on this picture (from 1971) showing the full-size Talbot-Lago (with chassis 90019/90115) the paintwork is an exact match.
The model in the beautiful Art Deco style is in an amazing
Curious about the asking price? The seller is asking just €6975 for this amazing piece of automotive history. For more information, please go to the advertisement and contact the seller.
I regret having to write this, but your response to my comments to your advert is simply not correct. As you may or may not know, I am in the process of writing serveral volumes on Figoni and Figoni et Falaschi. I have the Figoni archives, and I can without blushing state that I am an authority on the matter. I can assure you that only two T150 C-SS cabriolets were built: 90111 and 90115. There were no others. 90111 was cream and red and repainted silver years later. Silver was never the original color of that car or the other. 90111 survives in a complete state and was shown at Pebble Beach in 2019. The chassis of 90115 exists with a new body replicated by RM as the original body was lost (this is fully documented). Around 1945, a dealer in Bordeaux mounted the body from 90115 on a T23 chassis and advertised the car for sale. This combo is lost and has left no trace. But it was not a third car. There is or was no all-silver third car.
In addition, for reasons unknown, while T150 C-SS Figoni Teardrops were shown at period concours and ran at Le Mans, one such was never shown at the Paris Salon. The only Salon showing of a T150 C-SS Goutte d'Eau (Teardrop and Goutte d'Eau were not terms used by Figoni) was chassis 90103 at the 1937 New York Motor Show. Hence the internal Figoni term "Coupé Américain" for the fastback version. Nor were any of the two T150 C-SS cabriolets shown at any Salon.
I can sympathize that it is frustrating to be informed that something one owns is not what it may appear to be to some. But there is no hard evidence of any kind that your model was manufactured by Figoni, and the account of color changes due to the showing (that never took place) of a third car (that never existed), simply does not hold water.
I will always admit to having made a mistake if proof to the contrary is forthcoming. So I exhort you to furnish some kind of photographic material that shows a Teardrop and/or one of the two T150 C-SS cabriolets at the Paris Salon (what year?), as well as some kind of information that substantiates that your model was manufactured in the Figoni shops.