Vintage automobile in atmospheric setting

Departure as ceremony, not transaction

Why this exists

We started noticing a pattern

Collectors would spend decades with a vehicle. They'd restore it, campaign it, photograph it, store it in climate-controlled perfection. Then when the moment came to sell or donate — the handover felt hollow.

No ritual. No closure. Just keys and paperwork.

The idea came from a client in British Columbia

He owned a 1963 Aston Martin DB5 for thirty-two years. When he finally decided to place it in a private museum, he asked if we could "make the goodbye feel real."

We designed a half-day ceremony. Private track session. Filmed interview. Formal handover with the curator present. Leather-bound archive book delivered three weeks later.

Classic car documentation

He later told us it was the most important non-financial decision he made in the entire ownership journey.

That's when we understood: separation from a legendary machine isn't just logistical. It's emotional, historical, and deeply personal.

"People remember how they acquired the car. They rarely design how they let it go. We wanted to change that."

What guides our work

We believe vehicles carry narrative weight. A machine you've owned for decades isn't just property — it's biography. The way you separate from it should reflect that.

Every ceremony we design is private, bespoke, and built around your story. We're not event planners. We're ritual architects.

Our clients include founders, athletes, inheritors, museum curators, and collectors whose garages hold more stories than their homes. Discretion is foundational.

Begin your farewell ceremony

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