The Supercar Colouring Book contains 30 technically detailed illustrations showcasing the world's best Automotive engineering.From the early record breaking speed machines to the modern day hyper cars, immerse yourself in the world of Audi, Aston Martin, Ferrari,Lamborghini, Lotus, Masserati, Mercedes, McLaren and the mightiest U.S. Muscle Cars.Created for the serious Illustrator on quality paper each image has been hand crafted to look as lifelike as possible, enhanced by the photo realisticwheels and intricate details, the soft fine linework allows you to create subtle shading and gradient blends using pencils, markers or watercolours.The Supercar Colouring Book is a work of art just waiting for you to turn into a motoring masterpiece.
Robin Gardiner Book order







- 2016
- 2010
Since the best-selling The Ship That Never Sank was published in 1998, author Robin Gardiner has unearthed a wealth of new evidence in support of his theory that the sinking of the Titanic was a vast conspiracy, and that the ship that went down on April 12 was in fact the Olympic, Titanic's sister ship. This book concentrates on the conspiracy, with evidence of why the White Star company intended to defraud the insurance company by swapping the identity of Titanic and the recently damaged Olympic in a collision with HMS Hawke, with new conclusive photographic and documentary evidence of the swap. The subsequent staged collision with the iceberg went horribly wrong as those in charge of Titanic completely underestimated the scale of the panic and the ensuing disaster. The ship quickly sank and the rescue boats failed to arrive, making it a disaster that would reverberate around the world.
- 2009
In April 1912, the Titanic sank after hitting an iceberg, a tragedy thought to be unthinkable. This book presents a new perspective on that fateful night, offering fresh evidence that sheds light on the true circumstances surrounding the disaster.
- 1995
The Riddle of the Titanic
- 400 pages
- 14 hours of reading
Ten years after the first exploration of the Titanic wreck two and a half miles under the north Atlantic, and eighty-four years after she sank, Robin Gardiner and Dan van der Vat reappraised the legendary maritime disaster.Why was the man at the helm when the Titanic hit the iceberg packed off to South Africa?Why did her reluctant Chief Officer 'still' feel uneasy about a ship on which he had never sailed before?Why did one of her stewards 'wish the bally ship at the bottom of the sea'?It was not only the sea that covered up the Titanic . . .