Tony Stewart #14 and #11 Die-cast Stock Car Collectibles
Die-cast scale model sculpture and commercial packaging • Action Racing Collectibles (Motorsports Authentics) / Platinum Series

Style & Movement
Contemporary Sports Memorabilia / Commercial Industrial Design
Medium & Technique
Injection-molded metal (die-cast), plastic components, and pad-printed (tampo) decals on cardboard lithographic packaging.
Creation Period
Circa 2009-2012 (corresponding to Tony Stewart's time with Stewart-Haas Racing)
Dimensions & Format
1:24 Scale (approximately 8.5 inches in length per car); rectangular landscape packaging
Subject Description
Replica NASCAR stock cars featuring driver Tony Stewart. Includes the #14 Office Depot/Old Spice Chevrolet and a #11 Fedex/Joe Gibbs Racing era vehicle in the background. The designs feature high-velocity graphics, sponsor logos (contingency decals), and driver branding.
Condition & Value Assessment
Condition Assessment
Good to Very Good (Based on visible packaging wear)
Estimated Market Value
$40 - $120 USD (depending on specific rarity and car production numbers)
Auction Estimate
$30 - $80 USD per unit
Provenance History
Mass-produced limited edition adult collectibles; likely acquired via retail or hobbyist secondary markets. Includes 'Action Platinum Series' branding.
Art Historical Significance
Represents the intersection of corporate sponsorship and American folk-hero worship in late 20th/early 21st-century motorsports culture. These objects serve as tactile archives of professional racing history and livery design evolution.
Notable Features
Includes the 'Smoke' by Tony Stewart branding; features 'Limited Edition Adult Collectible' labels and authentic NASCAR holographic licensing stickers.
Condition Issues
Visible edge wear (whitening) on the cardboard packaging corners and minor scuffing on the black box surfaces.
Conservation Recommendations
Store in a UV-protected environment; maintain stable humidity to prevent decal peeling or metal oxidation (zinc pest); avoid stacking which can crush the cardboard infrastructure.