RE: Rolls marks 10 years of Black Badge 'alter ego'
RE: Rolls marks 10 years of Black Badge 'alter ego'
Yesterday

Rolls marks 10 years of Black Badge 'alter ego'

John Lennon helped pioneer the concept of a blacked-out Rolls-Royce - talk about prescient...


Not that long ago, Rolls-Royce was not a brand for young people. Too stuffy, too old fashioned, too prim. But as the 21st century has developed, as the Rolls-Royce line up has evolved - think of the Ghost and Wraith’s introduction - and the attitudes of the world’s wealthiest have changed, so the Spirit of Ecstasy has become hugely aspirational for an entirely new generation of fresher faced buyers. Alongside a rejuvenated model line up, this appeal can surely be partly attributed to the Black Badge spec, now available across every R-R bar the Phantom and celebrating 10 years this month. 

First announced at the Geneva show in 2016 for the Wraith and Ghost, the Black Badges were the raciest Rolls-Royces yet created from the factory. And that made them cool: in monotone and with some neat touches they looked meaner, the interiors actually made carbon fibre look good, they went faster, and they handled a little more keenly. The Black Badges moved Rolls-Royce into a space that it hadn’t been before, and it was exactly the space that a more overt kind of rich person wanted to be. A new generation of wealth told Rolls what they wanted from the brand, and that’s Black Badge became. Or, as Rolls-Royce puts it: ‘They projected their influence unapologetically, demanding exquisitely crafted products and uncompromising experiences, but with a dynamic edge and a defiant attitude that reflected their lives, their ambitions and their daring. Their taste defined new codes of luxury: darker in aesthetic, more assertive in character and bolder in design.’ 

Following 2016 (and that outrageous FOS burnout), it was no surprise to find that more Black Badge Rolls-Royces came after the Wraith and Ghost. Following absolutely the same template, too, because it had worked (and continues to work) so well: black out the chrome bits, add the infinity badges, fit the Black Badge wheels and boost the V12 ever so slightly. There’s obviously more to making a new Rolls-Royce than just that - there’s 45kg of paint so think of, for one thing - the Black Badges do have some recognisable design themes. Even if you don’t actually go to black…

The popularity can be witnessed, to some extent, by just how many Black Badges are for sale. We just love a slightly sportier car in Britain, whether it’s a M Performance BMW, an AMG Line Mercedes, an Aston Martin ‘S’ car or a Black Badge Rolls. There are examples on PH all the way back from a 2016 Dawn and to a 2026 Spectre (the most powerful Rolls-Royce ever, don’t forget). Highlights? The Black Badges that aren’t black, really, for being a bit different - see the Orange Ghost, two-tone Wraith and Turquoise Dawn for proof of that. 

There’ll be plenty more where 10 years of Rolls-Royce’s ‘formidable alter ego’ has come from, basically, because the clients can’t get enough. Indeed Black Badge is now about more than just the cars, said to have also inspired additional Rolls-Royce Bespoke commissions ‘from vintage video-game culture and collectable sneakers to graffiti art, land-speed records, influential nightclubs, and even the digital economy.’ Plus there have been one offs built from the Black Badge cars, because sometimes even flagship Rolls-Royces aren’t exclusive enough. See the Wraith Black Arrow, Cullinan Blue Shadow and Ghost Ekleipsis as evidence. It’s been a busy first 10 years for Black Badge, put it that way. 

Rolls-Royce chief exec Chris Brownridge said: “From the outset, Black Badge was created to welcome a new generation of clients into Rolls-Royce: individuals who express their success unapologetically and with conviction. By serving them with the care and precision that defines the wider Rolls-Royce experience, we have made the marque relevant to many clients who may never have previously considered it. This has supported the measured and sustained growth of Rolls-Royce Motor Cars over the ten years since Black Badge was introduced… I am excited to drive the further evolution of Black Badge in the years ahead.” So don’t be surprised if a Phantom Black Badge, which has never existed in the first decade, comes to fruition one day. After all, why not? 


Author
Discussion

Simon Lee 100

Original Poster:

29 posts

131 months

Yesterday (16:39)
quotequote all
The photography of the cars is amazing. But I think some of the designs have just gone too far.

andrewpandrew

2,164 posts

12 months

Yesterday (16:41)
quotequote all
The front end of the new Cullinan is just wrong.

swisstoni

22,157 posts

302 months

Yesterday (18:04)
quotequote all
andrewpandrew said:
The front end of the new Cullinan is just wrong.
I'm reminded a bit of Droopy.


craigjm

20,425 posts

223 months

Yesterday (18:23)
quotequote all
You can make some really gopping stuff on the configurator with the black badge option for sure but if its bringing in younger people with money to spend then crack on making a profit.

LRDefender

405 posts

31 months

Yesterday (18:24)
quotequote all
It’s great to see R.R. are acknowledging their potential customers aren’t stuffy old grumpy grandads…

These refreshed designs keep people interested in the brand, the kind of people that might actually buy a R.R. product. I personally think R.R. have transformed the company with products that appeal to new global audiences with their products, something that Jaguar spectacularly failed to do.

Keep up the good work R.R.

craigjm

20,425 posts

223 months

Yesterday (18:29)
quotequote all
LRDefender said:
It s great to see R.R. are acknowledging their potential customers aren t stuffy old grumpy grandads

These refreshed designs keep people interested in the brand, the kind of people that might actually buy a R.R. product. I personally think R.R. have transformed the company with products that appeal to new global audiences with their products, something that Jaguar spectacularly failed to do.

Keep up the good work R.R.
Agree 100% and this is what Jaguar should be doing with their new range

biggbn

30,004 posts

243 months

Yesterday (18:44)
quotequote all
Love the big coupe. Lottery win car right there.

Digger

16,092 posts

214 months

Yesterday (19:09)
quotequote all
45 KGS of paint. . .

Good Lord!

Dark85

706 posts

171 months

Yesterday (19:34)
quotequote all
andrewpandrew said:
The front end of the new Cullinan is just wrong.
It looks like it finally saw itself in a mirror

SR

328 posts

228 months

Yesterday (23:51)
quotequote all
Some fantastic colours there! Loving the red one! And the purple too!
If you’ve got it, flaunt it!

uktrailmonster

9,576 posts

223 months

andrewpandrew said:
The front end of the new Cullinan is just wrong.
I’m going to take a wild guess this is the white monstrosity in the photos right? If so I agree with you.

fflump

2,961 posts

61 months

The purple-blue one at the end(Spectre?) looks cool but overall Bentley do sporty luxury a bit better imo.

Big_Steve

23 posts

73 months

LRDefender said:
It s great to see R.R. are acknowledging their potential customers aren t stuffy old grumpy grandads

These refreshed designs keep people interested in the brand, the kind of people that might actually buy a R.R. product. I personally think BMW have transformed the company with products that appeal to new global audiences with their products, something that Jaguar spectacularly failed to do.

Keep up the good work BMW.
Fixed.

Good Plan Ted

2,262 posts

254 months

A floater


andrewpandrew

2,164 posts

12 months

uktrailmonster said:
andrewpandrew said:
The front end of the new Cullinan is just wrong.
I m going to take a wild guess this is the white monstrosity in the photos right? If so I agree with you.
It is indeed.