Support road.cc

Like this site? Help us to make it better.

feature

Check out 12 of the best Tour de France paint jobs from Specialized, Trek, Cannondale & loads more

Take a look at the coolest finishes we've seen on Tour de France bikes in the 14 years we've been covering the race on road.cc

Pro teams and their sponsors want to stand out from the crowd at the Tour de France – it’s cycling’s biggest shop window, after all – and that often means that bikes get cool new paint jobs; here are a dozen of the best since road.cc started covering the race back in 2009.

Lance Armstrong, Damien Hirst Trek Madone, 2009

Tour 2009 Lance Armstrong Hirst Butterfly - 1 (1)

Lance Armstrong rode the final stage of the 2009 Tour de France on a Trek Madone with a butterfly finish designed by Damien Hurst. 

Along with six others used by Armstrong during his first season out of retirement – which must be one of the worst decisions in sporting history – the Butterfly Bike raised $1.3 million at auction for the Livestrong charity.

Fabian Cancellara, Spartacus Trek Speed Concept, 2011

TK11_SC_Sparacus_Profile_mk.jpg

Over the course of his distinguished career, Fabian Cancellara used various bikes with finishes based on his Spartacus nickname, and we like this one from 2011. 

Fabian Cancellara s Leopard Trek Speed Concept31.jpg

Sometimes nickname-inspired finishes really don’t work but this one is pretty cool. It features a helmet design on the head tube and fork and related imagery on the disc rear wheel.

Peter Sagan, ‘Hulk’ Cannondale SuperSix Evo, 2013

peter sagan hulk cannondale 01

Peter Sagan made a quick Hulk impression when he won a stage of the Tour in 2012 and that became the inspiration for a paint job in 2013. 

Cannondale Peter Sagan custom Hulk - the eyes

Sagan also won the green points jersey for the first time at the 2012 Tour, so there was that tie-in too. The green paint apparently glowed in the dark, although we’re really not sure why that was a benefit on a bike ridden exclusively in July sunshine.

Vincenzo Nibali, Specialized Tarmac, 2014

Vincenzo Nibali bike side

Nibali was nicknamed the Shark and had a whole bunch of shark-themed finishes during his career. This is our favourite.

Vincenzo Nibali head tube

The frame had a blue glitter finish and cartoon shark eyes and teeth. There were even gills along the top tube. Nice attention to detail.

Marcel Kittel, Specialized Venge ViAS, 2016

marcel kittel specialized venge tdf1.jpg

Etixx-Quick Step’s Marcel Kittel raced the 2016 Tour de France – and won Stage 4 – aboard a Specialized Venge ViAS custom painted by the brand’s Ron Jones.

marcel kittel specialized venge tdf8.jpg

The graphics are based on electrons impacting one another in the CERN particle accelerator. And the link with cycling? It was all to do with Kittel’s explosive speed, apparently. Kittel was a quick lad, but 99.9% the speed of light? That’s pushing it.

All we know is that it looked pretty neat.

Mark Cavendish, Cervelo S5, 2017Tour Tech: Mark Cavendish's Cervelo S5 with an F1 paint finish

It’s a cycling truism that the less something weighs the more it costs, but the finish on Mark Cavendish’s 2017 Cervelo S5 took this to the extreme. We’re talking about €4,000 for something 10 microns (or 1/100th of a millimetre) thick and weighing just a gram.Cavendish Cervelo S5 Tour Tech - 12.jpg

Silverstone Paint Technology developed the heat-shielding material for Formula One brakes and engines, and Cervelo added a green dye to produce a fade finish across the frame. It was so thin that you could see the carbon weave through it in places.

Primoz Roglic, Eagle Bianchi Oltre XR4, 2018Bianchi's Oltre XR4 special edition paint jobs for the Tour de France

We can’t decide whether the picture of an eagle on Roglic’s 2018 bike was cool or, you know, a bit like the sort of thing you see airbrushed to the side of lorries at travelling funfairs.

It was a reference to when he ‘flew’ away from his breakaway group on the Col du Galibier in the previous year’s Tour de France, although we'll forgive you for not making the connection. I mean, there's lateral thinking and there’s plain tenuous.

Tim Wellens, Polka Dot Ridley Helium SLX, 2019Tour de France 2019 Tim Wellens Ridley.jpg

Tim Wellens didn’t win the overall King of the Mountains competition in the 2019 Tour de France but he did lead the competition for a while so his Ridley Helium SLX got a polka dot makeover.

There’s nothing unusual in that – it’s a Tour tradition for sponsors to give competition leaders paint jobs to match their jerseys – but this one is particularly well done.

Trek-Segafredo, Molten Marble Trek Madone, 2019Tour de France 2019 Trek molten marble finish - 1

Trek-Segafredo’s 2019 Tour de France bikes were given a ‘Molten Marble’ finish to highlight one of the paint schemes available through Trek’s Project One custom programmeTour de France 2019 Trek molten marble finish - 2

Very cool!

Astana Pro Team, Wilier 0 SLR, 2020TdF 2020 Alexey Lutsenko Wilier 0 SLR - 1

There’s nothing Tour de France-specific about this paint job – it was the standard Astana finish at the time. We’ve just included it here because it’s gorgeous!

Julian Alaphilippe, World Champion Specialized S-Works Tarmac SL7, 2021 

2021 Julian Alaphilippe Specialized Tarmac SL7 - 1When you’re world champion you’ve earned the right to stick rainbow stripes over pretty much everything you own. Specialized did a great job on Alaphilippe’s bike last year.

EF Education-EasyPost, Palace Skateboards Cannondale SystemSix, 2022

Are these Cannondale & Palace EF Education team bikes the maddest in the peloton?EF Education-EasyPost riders are competing in the 2022 Tour de France on Cannondale SystemSix, SuperSix Evo, and SuperSlice bikes featuring a Palace Skateboards collaboration finish from doktorbobby

2023 Cannondale Rapha Palace Tour de France - 1 (1).jpeg

The women’s EF Education-EasyPost team will race the Tour de France Femmes on similar bikes.

Judging by your comments, it’s a design that divides opinion.

What did we miss? And which would you ditch? Let us know in the comments below.

Mat has been in cycling media since 1996, on titles including BikeRadar, Total Bike, Total Mountain Bike, What Mountain Bike and Mountain Biking UK, and he has been editor of 220 Triathlon and Cycling Plus. Mat has been road.cc technical editor for over a decade, testing bikes, fettling the latest kit, and trying out the most up-to-the-minute clothing. He has won his category in Ironman UK 70.3 and finished on the podium in both marathons he has run. Mat is a Cambridge graduate who did a post-grad in magazine journalism, and he is a winner of the Cycling Media Award for Specialist Online Writer. Now over 50, he's riding road and gravel bikes most days for fun and fitness rather than training for competitions.

Add new comment

2 comments

Avatar
henryb | 2 years ago
0 likes

(Typo alert: In the Marcel Kittel section, "And the like with cycling?" should be "And the link with cycling?")

Avatar
Jack Sexty replied to henryb | 2 years ago
0 likes

Do I not like that... thanks, it's been changed! 

Latest Comments