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412 Motorsport I Cavallino Drive '25

Written by

Rhiyen Sharp

Photographed by

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Styled by

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Photo by Brandon Lim

A Rally of Ritual, Precision, and Red-Blooded Reverence

On the last Sunday of July, Los Angeles didn't just hum - it howled. Over thirty Ferraris assembled at the headquarters of 412 Motorsport, each one a machine of lineage and intent. From one-off classics to the latest SF90 Stradale and 812 Competizione, the Cavallino convoy slithered up the Pacific Coast Highway in symphonic defiance, metal to sun, speed to stillness.

Joseph Nahhas - founder of 412 Motorsport and architect of this red-blooded ceremony - led the way in a commanding F12, flanked by his top-tier team and a trail of police escorts that turned the coastline into a moving red carpet. Above, a family friend circled in a helicopter for the aerial salute that was less spectacle, more poetry.

Photo by Brandon Lim

Dominated by bold Rosso Corsa, the procession's palette was punctuated with flashes of gold, silver, deep green, and midnight blue - a living composition of handcrafted interiors and carbon-fiber devotion. This wasn't a drive. It was a moving installation, a moment of kinetic luxury framed by asphalt and sea spray.

Photo by Brandon Lim

The rally's final note landed at El Encanto in the hills of Santa Barbara, where time bent briefly and engines cooled under oak shade. Not to forget, the beautifully designed merch tagging along the way.

Joseph Nahhas carries more than a title — he carries a narrative. With roots in Lebanon, a foundation in Pittsburgh, and nearly a decade shaping speed in Los Angeles, his vision for 412 Motorsport transcends mechanics. It's not just a garage - it's a gallery, a movement, and a meditation on the art of motion.

Photo by Brandon Lim

Cavallino was not just about horsepower or heritage. With DME tuning sponsorship, it was a tribute to the icons who made Ferrari mythic - and a gathering of those who live fast with intention. Enthusiasts, designers, racers, collectors — they didn't come to flex. They came to feel.

In a world obsessed with acceleration, this was a rare deceleration of elegance. A reminder that when you move with soul, you leave a trail.

Photo by Brandon Lim

With thanks Michael Miller

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