If your idea of rare Ferraris involves red paint and predictable specs, buckle in — Broad Arrow Auctions is about to show you how it’s really done. Their inaugural Zoute Concours Auction, happening on 10 October 2025, is rolling out two of the most collectible Maranello berlinettas around — both dripping in colours you definitely don’t see every day.

First up, a 1967 Ferrari 275 GTB/4, wearing an ultra-rare factory shade of Verde Pino (yes, pine green — because even Ferraris deserve to look effortlessly cool in earthy tones). Just 330 of these “four-cam” V12 beauties were ever built, but this one? Matching numbers, Ferrari Classiche certified, with its original tool kit, jack, Blaupunkt stereo, and enough impeccable provenance to impress even the snobbiest concours judge. It’s estimated between €2.7 and €3.2 million, which feels oddly reasonable when you consider most of us can’t even get a pine tree this rare.
Then there’s the 1970 Ferrari 365 GTB/4 ‘Plexi’ Daytona, one of only two delivered new in ivory Avorio paint. Even better, this one comes with a proper racing pedigree, originally owned by Belgian racing legend Baron Hughes de Fierlant — a man who casually took on Spa and Le Mans in his spare time.
These two headline an auction packed with automotive unicorns at Belgium’s Zoute Grand Prix Car Week. If pine green Ferraris and ivory racing Daytonas don’t tempt you, we’re not sure what will.








Images: Broad Arrow Auctions.