Union Jack Roundel — 2 museum-grade prints in this palette. Lagonda's V12 programme represents one of British motorsport's most elegant engineering stories — a luxury marque that translated twelve-cylinder road-car craft into Le Mans endurance campaigns across three distinct eras. The 1935 night-stint configuration with illuminated headlights captures the romance of pre-war Sarthe when drivers raced through darkness without halogen certainty, and Fox & Anthony's fourth overall validated Lagonda against stronger factory entries. Frazer Nash occupies a singular niche in British motorsport — a specialist builder that prioritized driver engagement and lightweight craft over factory scale, producing cars in numbers small enough that every Le Mans entry feels like a documented event. The Le Mans model name itself declares circuit intent, and the marque's Bristol-engine partnerships delivered reliable power in a package that punched above its displacement on twisty Sarthe sections even when Mulsanne straight speed favoured larger prototypes.