Switzerland retro - zamak cycling figurine | Le Petit Cycliste
search
  • Switzerland retro - zamak cycling figurine | Le Petit Cycliste
  • Switzerland retro - zamak cycling figurine | Le Petit Cycliste
  • Switzerland retro - zamak cycling figurine | Le Petit Cycliste
  • Switzerland retro - zamak cycling figurine | Le Petit Cycliste
  • Switzerland retro - zamak cycling figurine | Le Petit Cycliste
  • Switzerland retro - zamak cycling figurine | Le Petit Cycliste

Switzerland retro - cycling figurine

€13.90
Hand-painted zamak cycling figurine reproducing the Swiss national champion jersey in a retro style. French handcrafted production, Roubaix workshop.
Quantity

  Secure Payment

100% secured thanks to our advanced encryption protocols.

  Tracked Delivery

Full tracking for total peace of mind.

  Easy & Guaranteed Returns

Changed your mind? Return your items within 15 days.

The Swiss national champion jersey is one of the great icons of road cycling. This zamak figurine from the retro collection pays tribute to a nation that shaped the history of the peloton, from its earliest heroes of the 1950s through to the modern era.

Switzerland has long been a major force in professional cycling. Names like Hugo Koblet and Ferdi Kübler dominated the peloton in the golden age of the sport, writing their country into the palmares of the greatest races: the Tour de France, the Giro d'Italia, the World Championships. A tradition carried on decade after decade by climbers, rouleurs and sprinters who flew the Swiss jersey on every road in Europe.

Each figurine is cast in zamak, a zinc alloy prized for its durability and exceptional finish — the ideal material for a serious collector's piece. The paint is applied entirely by hand in a workshop in Roubaix, with the artisan care that defines every piece from Le Petit Cycliste.

  • Material: zamak (zinc alloy)
  • Hand-painted, made to order
  • Made in France — Roubaix workshop
  • Retro collection

A piece for collectors who follow the international peloton and want to honour in their collection the legacy of one of professional cycling's founding nations.

Comments (0)