Technical blueprint, Drawn in Ink
Concorde
Concorde
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Format: A3 — 29.7 × 42 cm (11.7 × 16.5 in)
Pen type: Stabilo Point 88 or Sakura Gelly Roll pens
Paper: 270 gsm (55 lb) Clairefontaine Maya paper
Created with a NextDraw pen plotter - Frame not included
🇫🇷🇬🇧 The Concorde, first flown in 1969, became one of the most iconic airliners in aviation history. Developed through a joint effort between France and the United Kingdom, it was designed to carry passengers at supersonic speeds, cutting transatlantic flight times in half.
Cruising at Mach 2.04 (about 1,354 mph / 2,180 km/h) at altitudes above 60,000 feet (18,000 meters), Concorde combined groundbreaking engineering with elegant design, featuring its slender fuselage and distinctive delta wing. Operated by Air France and British Airways, it famously connected Paris and London to New York in just over three hours.
A symbol of speed, innovation, and luxury, Concorde remains—decades after its retirement in 2003—a timeless icon of the supersonic age.
