Ferrari Polaroid Mystery Boxes
OPUS for the first time is offering Mystery Boxes, the first offering is based off the Giant 20 x 24 Polaroid Portraits taken of Ferrari legends and Iconic Ferrari F1 Grand Prix cars owned by Bernie Ecclestone in his highly prized & private collection on the world’s largest Polaroid camera
MYSTERY BOX OFFER
Each mystery box costs £299 / $400 including delivery and will contain the following:
3x Ferrari Polaroid Portrait Prints with a total RRP of £600 / $765. So the discount for the mystery boxes equates to 50% (RRP of each Polaroid Portrait Print is £200 / $255)
PLUS
£75 / $100 discount code that can be used to purchase a 4th Polaroid Portrait print for the reduced price of £125 / $160. The discount code will be sent electronically.
Only 25 Mystery Boxes will initially be released.
No two Mystery Boxes will contain the same 3 Polaroids thus making each box UNIQUE in content.
There are 22 Ferrari Polaroid Portraits in total – 15x Ferrari F1 cars and 7x Ferrari Legends.
Each Polaroid Portrait Print has the following specification:
- Print Size: Each Polaroid Print is approx 20 inches (50cm) by 26.5 inches (67cm)
- Paper Weight: Heavyweight 400gsm to replicate the original Polaroids
- Print Finish: Gloss coating to replicate the gloss emulsion found on the original Polaroids
THE FERRARI F1 GRAND PRIX CARS POLAROIDS ARE:
Ferrari 123 Thin Wall Special
Ferrari 166 F2
Ferrari 312
Ferrari 312 B2
Ferrari 312 B3-74
Ferrari 312 F1-66
Ferrari 312 T2
Ferrari 375 F1
Ferrari 555 F1 Super Squalo
Ferrari Dino 246 F1
Ferrari F1-86
Ferrari F1-87
Ferrari F2002 Front
Ferrari F2002 Rear
Lancia-Ferrari D50A
THE FERRARI LEGENDS POLAROIDS ARE:
Mario Andretti
Niki Lauda
Nigel Mansell
Felipe Massa
Michael Schumacher
Jody Scheckter
John Surtees
THE CAMERA
The original Polaroids were taken on the very special Polaroid 20×24 camera, the largest Polaroid camera ever built and weighs an incredible 240lb / 109kg. The film for the camera is no longer made thus making the Polaroids incredibly valuable.
As a double first – not only is it the first time the camera has been used to photograph racing cars; but it also the first and only time Bernie Ecclestone has allowed his private Grand Prix collection to be photographed and displayed to the public.