Ferrari Heritage — 14 museum-grade prints that set the mood. Michele Alboreto won five Formula One Grands Prix across his career — two with Tyrrell, two with Ferrari in 1985, and one with Larrousse in 1993. His Canadian and German victories that year made him Italy's Ferrari standard-bearer through the Prost-McLaren and Rosberg-Williams era. Mika Salo's Formula One career bridged Lotus, Tyrrell, Arrows, and Toyota across three decades — yet his 1999 Ferrari substitute stint remains the defining chapter for Finnish motorsport fans who watched a stand-in nearly win at Hockenheim before team orders intervened. Salo never won a Grand Prix, yet his measured professionalism during Schumacher's absence and Irvine's title chase earned respect from Maranello and the paddock alike. Jean Alesi never won a world championship, yet his Paul Ricard 1990 podium tears and single victory at Montreal 1995 made him France's most beloved Ferrari driver between Prost and the modern era. His number 27 cult following, karting aggression translated to F1 late braking, and refusal to temper emotion in the cockpit kept him in fan polls long after statistics suggested otherwise.