

p.s. Vintagemishal and a few others do great old school paint too, I didn't mean to leave them out.


And The Fast and the Furious was probably influential with the current fascination with plastering stickers all over one's ricer, something you never saw back in the muscle car era. Back then as now, I never liked the idea of putting too many stickers on a vehicle, real or scale model. Some people spend hours doing up a nice paint-job, then obscure half the job with decals. Not my thing at all, I try to have a minimalist view when it comes to sticker application, and I avoid obscuring a nice paint scheme with stickers.THEYTOOKMYTHUMB wrote:So basically we went from Knight Rider to The Fast And The Furious...
Hell, my crappy paint jobs are nothing but stickersmarkt311 wrote:I have to cover up my crappy paintjobs with stickers.
Now don't be so hard on yourself Reg. I mean this paintjob is GR-R-REAT!Charlie don't surf wrote:Hell, my crappy paint jobs are nothing but stickersmarkt311 wrote:I have to cover up my crappy paintjobs with stickers.
Andy still sells his painted bodies, just only at the shop where he works. I will attempt to get a cell phone shot of the "wall" of painted cars.Eau Rouge wrote:I think you can also document the end of that "old school" style when Andy's (Andy Jacobsen) stopped painting and selling pre-painted bodies. His style was hugely influential for that whole era of race paint.
I couldn't agree more. A paint scheme should somehow flow with the body lines. I remember reading that in a hot rod magazine when I was in my teens, probably Popular Hot Rodding (in the early 80's). Cars with mostly straight lines should have stripes or graphics that are mostly straight, to compliment the lines; cars with flowing curves should have curved lines/graphics. Although that's not a rule, it's a useful guideline in helping choose a paint scheme that works for a particular car body.RedScampi wrote:The paint should complement the car not obscure it. As a friend of mine says, Any thing worth doing is worth over doing.
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