I haven't posted before, but I have lurked for a long time. So I think that my post is probably grown up enough to go in the main forum.
I've come to the conclusion that I like the look of well-maintained single-stage paint better than clear-coat finishes.
I saw a wonderful dark blue on an early 80's Mercedes 300D which was much more interesting than the bright happy blues on newer cars.
But to make the finish comparison more accurate, I've been focusing my attention on black paint. I liked the black on an older Jeep (one with fake wood trim on the outside) much better than the black on new volkswagens and volvos.
Does anyone else feel this way? Obviously clear-coat is here to stay, but does anybody know whether there's a way to make a clear-coat less reflective (shiny with deep pools but not bouncing off reflective), in short to make it look more like single-stage paint short of removing the clear coat layer?
I've come to the conclusion that I like the look of well-maintained single-stage paint better than clear-coat finishes.
I saw a wonderful dark blue on an early 80's Mercedes 300D which was much more interesting than the bright happy blues on newer cars.
But to make the finish comparison more accurate, I've been focusing my attention on black paint. I liked the black on an older Jeep (one with fake wood trim on the outside) much better than the black on new volkswagens and volvos.
Does anyone else feel this way? Obviously clear-coat is here to stay, but does anybody know whether there's a way to make a clear-coat less reflective (shiny with deep pools but not bouncing off reflective), in short to make it look more like single-stage paint short of removing the clear coat layer?