Amalgam Collection is a creator of collectible scale models working at the intersection of engineering precision, design, and applied art. The company collaborates directly with the most important names in the global automotive world — Ferrari, Bugatti, McLaren, Porsche, Lamborghini, Rolls-Royce, and Bentley — as well as with motorsport legends and private collectors. Amalgam’s philosophy is built on uncompromising accuracy and respect for the original: every model is conceived as an object of lasting collectible value rather than a decorative replica.
FERRARI SF-25 MELBOURNE F1 LECLERC


The Ferrari SF-25 collectible model in 1:18 scale is a precise representation of the FIA Formula One 2025 season car driven by Charles Leclerc and Lewis Hamilton at the Australian Grand Prix in Albert Park. The model is hand-built by a small team of craftsmen and based on original CAD data and paint codes supplied by Scuderia Ferrari.
More than 800 hours of development, over 31 cm in length, precision cast parts, photo-etched components, and CNC-machined metal elements — every detail reflects exceptional engineering and visual accuracy. Special attention is given to the 2025 season livery: deep matte Racing Red, a contrasting diagonal white stripe, and subtle gloss accents that connect Ferrari’s heritage with contemporary racing aesthetics.
The Kerbside execution emphasizes the model’s collectible value, focusing on purity of form and accuracy of proportions. This is not simply a scale model of a Formula One car, but a captured moment in Ferrari’s history — a season marking the beginning of a new chapter for the team.
BUGATTI TYPE 59


The Bugatti Type 59 collectible model in 1:18 scale embodies one of the most elegant chapters in pre-war Grand Prix history. It recreates the car driven by Tazio Nuvolari to a fifth-place finish at the 1934 Monaco Grand Prix — a race that symbolized motorsport’s transition from craftsmanship to engineering art.
The Type 59 is rightly considered a masterpiece on wheels. Its elongated, low, perfectly balanced silhouette — inherited from the legendary Type 35 and refined to ideal proportions by Ettore and Jean Bugatti — made the car a style icon even when it was technically surpassed by newer competitors. It became Bugatti’s last truly successful Grand Prix car — a machine where engineering boldness met an extraordinary sense of form.
The model is hand-built and developed from ultra-precise digital scans of original chassis No. 59122 from the Ralph Lauren Collection, using archival imagery and authentic Bugatti paint codes. More than 800 hours were required for development: cast parts, photo-etched details, and CNC-machined metal components convey the refinement of construction and the attention to detail for which the marque is known.
This is not simply a scale replica — it is a captured moment of an era when Bugatti automobiles were not only racing machines but also works of art now found in the world’s most important private collections.
MCLAREN F1 LM


The McLaren F1 LM collectible model in 1:18 scale materializes one of the greatest moments in motorsport history. It recreates the legendary F1 version built to celebrate McLaren’s remarkable debut victory at the 24 Hours of Le Mans — a moment that forever changed perceptions of what a road-going supercar could be.
The F1 LM represents the concentrated essence of racing adapted for the road — lower, stiffer, lighter, and more radical than the standard F1. Described by McLaren as “an untamed Le Mans racing car with license plates,” it united racing aggression with engineering excellence. This model became a symbol of absolute engineering freedom and a no-compromise approach to speed.
The scale replica is hand-built using thousands of precision-engineered parts — cast components, photo-etched elements, and CNC-machined metal pieces. It is based on original CAD designs developed from ultra-precise digital scans of chassis LM3, along with authentic drawings and material specifications provided by McLaren Automotive. Every proportion, line, and surface conveys the radical character of the original.
This is not simply a scale object — it is a captured moment in history when McLaren proved that the boundary between racing car and road car could disappear.
AMALGAM COLLECTION AT SANAHUNT
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