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The brushout sample scanned and sent in the e-mail looks exactly like Reefer yellow should look. They just need to fix the website with these actual brushouts instead of some graphicy (sp?) color blob.
Tony covered that issue on page one Robert. This was a case of a yellow being rendered as a green, which is beyond the range of acceptable calibration errors.
...They just need to fix the website with these actual brushouts instead of some graphicy (sp?) color blob.
Bob, do you take everything to the N'th degree???I think everybody pretty much understands that their monitor is not going to be calibrated to the exact pantone color which is a perfect match the last batch of paint that shipped to their shop. I don't expect that, paint varies from batch to batch. Humidity, temperature, lighting all have slight effects on the apparent color that the paint dries. There are a thousand variables to deal with, we get that. What would be nice is that the sample they show on their site is somewhat close to what you should expect coming from the bottle. I have painted professionally for over 10 years, the only colors that I have seen come out of the bottle exactly the same shade every time are black and white. Read the whole topic before you start spouting off the world acording to Bob. This is model railroading, and its supposed to be fun. Sometimes you just have to accept that things are a little off and deal with it.
So is Reefer Yellow the color of FGE reefers? Cause it looks a little yellower on the car. Old MR drawings of the car I'm doing call it "chromate yellow".
Are you asking about new (fresh out of the paint shop) car, lightly weathered, heavily weathered or just faded from sun? There is no generic "correct" color for any car as the color changed (even on the same car) over time. And if you are trying to match a color to a color photograph, things get even more tangled up! Color matching is one of those topics . . .