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Van Aert rises above the cobbles of Montmartre to conquer Paris.
In cycling, there are moments that stick. Not because of statistics or gaps in the general classification, but because of what they look like — and what they feel like. This Sunday, under a steel sky and a sea of flags, Wout van Aert wrote one of those moments into the stone and sweat of the Tour de France.
Three times he attacked the Rue Lepic, that jagged ribbon of cobblestones twisting toward the Sacré-Cœur. Three times he dragged his frame and yellow bike past thousands of screaming fans on the slopes of Montmartre. But it was the final surge, the one that left Tadej Pogacar behind, that truly belonged to Wout van Aert.
“I knew I had to go on the third climb. It was now or never,” van Aert said at the finish, still breathing hard, traces of grit and glory on his face. “Beating Pogacar in Paris, on a stage like this… it’s the dream ending to a long, hard Tour.”
And it wasn’t just any final stage. For the first time in history, the Tour de France ended not with a procession, but with a battle — one that ran through the most cinematic hill in Paris before descending to the sacred finishing line on the Champs-Élysées. It was the kind of finish that turns a victory into a legacy.
This was Wout van Aert Tour de France at its finest: the cobblestone conqueror, the showman, the all-rounder. Already a collector of memorable wins, the Belgian’s triumph here echoes those of the sport’s legends — part Flandrien, part panache.
The Wout van Aert poster from this unforgettable 21st stage, capturing him mid-attack in front of the Sacré-Cœur, is more than a souvenir — it’s a symbol of courage, power, and spectacle. Few images from this Tour will resonate more than van Aert, mouth clenched, fans on fire, wheels slicing through the wet stones of Montmartre.
Bring the drama home. This stunning cycling print, part of our Tour de France poster collection, immortalizes van Aert’s strike in the Parisian hills. A piece of cycling wall art that celebrates one of the most iconic attacks in recent memory.
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➤ ABOUT THE PRINT
Each artwork is professionally printed on gallery quality matte paper which perfectly compliments the designs using only archival inks. The high print quality ensure that your wall print will last a long time while maintaining its original color.
Premium Matte Paper: 200 gsm, premium quality, matte finish
Shipped in a stiff cardboard tube (100% recyclable, 90% recycled)
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➤ HOW TO ORDER
Simply purchase the listing in your desired size.
Sizes:
A3 (297 X 420 mm / 11.7 X 16.5 in)
A2 (420 x 594 mm / 16.5 x 23.4 in)
A1 (594 x 841 mm / 23.4 x 33.1 in)
---------------------------------------------------
➤ PLEASE NOTE: FRAME IS NOT INCLUDED
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➤ ADDITIONAL
If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact us.
Van Aert rises above the cobbles of Montmartre to conquer Paris.
In cycling, there are moments that stick. Not because of statistics or gaps in the general classification, but because of what they look like — and what they feel like. This Sunday, under a steel sky and a sea of flags, Wout van Aert wrote one of those moments into the stone and sweat of the Tour de France.
Three times he attacked the Rue Lepic, that jagged ribbon of cobblestones twisting toward the Sacré-Cœur. Three times he dragged his frame and yellow bike past thousands of screaming fans on the slopes of Montmartre. But it was the final surge, the one that left Tadej Pogacar behind, that truly belonged to Wout van Aert.
“I knew I had to go on the third climb. It was now or never,” van Aert said at the finish, still breathing hard, traces of grit and glory on his face. “Beating Pogacar in Paris, on a stage like this… it’s the dream ending to a long, hard Tour.”
And it wasn’t just any final stage. For the first time in history, the Tour de France ended not with a procession, but with a battle — one that ran through the most cinematic hill in Paris before descending to the sacred finishing line on the Champs-Élysées. It was the kind of finish that turns a victory into a legacy.
This was Wout van Aert Tour de France at its finest: the cobblestone conqueror, the showman, the all-rounder. Already a collector of memorable wins, the Belgian’s triumph here echoes those of the sport’s legends — part Flandrien, part panache.
The Wout van Aert poster from this unforgettable 21st stage, capturing him mid-attack in front of the Sacré-Cœur, is more than a souvenir — it’s a symbol of courage, power, and spectacle. Few images from this Tour will resonate more than van Aert, mouth clenched, fans on fire, wheels slicing through the wet stones of Montmartre.
Bring the drama home. This stunning cycling print, part of our Tour de France poster collection, immortalizes van Aert’s strike in the Parisian hills. A piece of cycling wall art that celebrates one of the most iconic attacks in recent memory.
---------------------------------------------------
➤ ABOUT THE PRINT
Each artwork is professionally printed on gallery quality matte paper which perfectly compliments the designs using only archival inks. The high print quality ensure that your wall print will last a long time while maintaining its original color.
Premium Matte Paper: 200 gsm, premium quality, matte finish
Shipped in a stiff cardboard tube (100% recyclable, 90% recycled)
---------------------------------------------------
➤ HOW TO ORDER
Simply purchase the listing in your desired size.
Sizes:
A3 (297 X 420 mm / 11.7 X 16.5 in)
A2 (420 x 594 mm / 16.5 x 23.4 in)
A1 (594 x 841 mm / 23.4 x 33.1 in)
---------------------------------------------------
➤ PLEASE NOTE: FRAME IS NOT INCLUDED
---------------------------------------------------
➤ ADDITIONAL
If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact us.