The Rolls-Royce That Finally Got What It Always Deserved
The 1970s Corniche was one of the most visually arresting cars ever built. Long hood, fixed-head coupe roofline, that unmistakable slab-sided confidence — it looked like money before money had a marketing team. The problem was what lived under that sheet metal. The engineering was a product of its era: heavy, soft, unreliable in ways that aged poorly.
Halcyon just fixed that.
Their Corniche restomod debuts as a tribute series of 60 examples — that's it, full stop. They've taken the original body and rebuilt it around modern mechanical underpinnings. The result is the car the Corniche always wanted to be: 1970s swagger with the kind of drivetrain reliability that lets you actually drive the thing instead of warehousing it.
This is the right way to do a restomod. Not chasing nostalgia, not slapping a new badge on an old shell. Taking what was genuinely beautiful about an era and pairing it with engineering that performs as intended today.
60 cars. That's a number that means something. In a world where 'limited edition' is a marketing tactic applied to everything from sneakers to hot sauce, 60 fixed-head coupes is a number that reflects an actual constraint — the time, the skill, the sourcing.
The price hasn't been widely disclosed yet, which tells you everything you need to know about who this is built for. If you're asking, you're probably not the buyer.
I'm watching Halcyon. This is the kind of work that earns attention.

