The phantom was repeatedly referred to as the “best car in the world”. So how do you improve it? Rolls-Royce still finds ways to increase its flagship product that celebrates the 10025th anniversary. The Ultra Luxurielle Limousine has produced another unique, but it has something that has not shared any other RR model before it.
The “Cherry Blossom” commission is the first car from Goodwood to have a tridimensional embroidery. A beautiful falling flower leaf motif adorns the rear door cards and the partition that separates the front and rear passenger compartments. Rolls-Royce took more than six months to complete the interior and took three weeks to embroider more than 250,000 stitches on the headliner.


The unique phantom was ordered by a wealthy customer from Japan who wanted RR to be inspired by Hanami. If this does not ring the bell, it is a local tradition to look at cherry blossoms in spring. The unique car has already been delivered so that the owner can now admire the cherry flower flowers on the headliner. The complicated, illuminated roof contains hand -sewn petals that give the illusion that they fall on the doors.
Each flower sheet was shaped by hand in a time -consuming, sensitive process, in which the petals were individually placed over the wasteful cabin. For a more realistic atmosphere, Rolls-Royce even used the surrounding lighting of the roof to create shadows. It really looks like a tree that hovers over the rear seats. But it is the tactile flower leaf embroidery that takes off this phantom from the others.
Without the umbrellas within the coaching doors, it would not be real roles. As you can imagine, the Hanami theme decorates the umbrellas with falling petals. It can also be felt on the front fenders with a discrete cherry flower motif with a discrete cherry flower motif.
The pricing is not mentioned, but the Phantom cherry blossom must have received a significant premium compared to the standard car that already costs more than 500,000 US dollars.
Source: Rolls-Royce