Fri, Feb 26, 2016
The bespoke pinstripes seen on Rolls-Royce cars have been painted by just one man over the last 10 years, epitomizing the UK luxury carmaker’s dedication to craftsmanship.
Expert painter Mark Cook has been responsible for each and every single coachline on all Rolls-Royce cars produced in the past decade, single-handedly painting more than 2,500 cars to date single-handedly painting more than 2,500 cars to date
Over eleven decades have passed since that famous lunch in May 1904 when Henry Royce, a successful engineer, struck a deal with Charles Rolls, owner of one of the first car dealerships to create Rolls-Royce. Since then, the stories about the intricacies of the manufacturing process of a Rolls-Royce car have become legendary in their own right.
Amidst the plethora of stories, Mark’s is one of the most widely discussed, as he is currently the only person in the world qualified and skilled enough to paint the famous pinstripe or ‘coachline’ on bespoke Rolls-Royce cars.
Symbolising the quality and uncompromising craftsmanship that is synonymous with the meticulous creation of a Rolls-Royce car, the coachline is applied entirely by hand, unaided by any machinery, running over both flanks of the full six meters of a Rolls-Royce vehicle.
It can either be single or double line, in a single colour or two-tone and can feature anything from logos, to family crests or even Arabic calligraphy, based entirely on what the customer requests through the Rolls-Royce Motor Cars’ Bespoke programme.
Some of the beautiful and elaborate designs that have featured on the coachline of a number of exclusive Rolls-Royce Bespoke models in the past few years include the intricate Arabic calligraphy elegantly expressed on the coachline of the One Thousand and One Nights Ghost Collection and the exquisite Peacock emblem decorating the emerald green coachline of the Rolls-Royce Maharaja Phantom Drophead Coupé.
Mark trained as a sign writer upon leaving school, and spent most of his early career painting restaurant signs, shop fronts and lettering on commercial vehicles, before the chance came to work at Rolls-Royce Motor Cars. At the home of Rolls-Royce in Goodwood, his talent allowed him to leave his fingerprint on some of the world’s most impressive bespoke vehicles with painstaking craftsmanship.
Besides the necessary artistic skill, mastering the art of coachlining requires astonishing levels of patience and focus, as fine brushes made of squirrel hair are used to create these elaborate designs, a process which can take up to three hours.
At the request of VIP customers, and as a testament to the dedication of Rolls-Royce to its valued clientele regardless of geographical location, Mark has on occasion visited customers at their homes to paint a coachline on a vehicle that has already left the factory. The story of his travel to the UAE city of Dubai in 2012, to paint a coachline on the vehicle of a very special client, has become legendary in the automotive industry, and was the subject of a short film produced by Rolls-Royce.
The steadiness of hand and ability to maintain such incredible levels of focus is something that perhaps can only be genetically inherited, which is why the person being groomed as Mark’s eventual successor is none other than his son, Ashley, who is currently an apprentice at the factory in Goodwood, being trained by his father to follow in his steps as a world-renowned Rolls-Royce coachliner.
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