Is it hard to match the color of ivory pearl?
#1
Is it hard to match the color of ivory pearl?
I have just painted my body kit uncluding front, rear bumpers and side skirts. The newly painted kit is much whiter than the car body. Will the color be matcher after receiving some sunlight? The bodyshop definitely just used the original factory paint and didn't do any adjustment.
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#4
A body should be able to get the paint color very close. Then they blend to the next major adjacent panel which causes a person not to perceive the shift in color. I haven't looked at an Ivory Pearl G close up yet, so I'm not sure if they actually use pearl in the paint, but if they do, it is a particularly hard color to match. There is no easy way to do it other than to try to blend each panel. If that panel doesn't match, you go further into the next until it either matches of you end up painting the pearl onto every adjacent panel.
As for Body kits, and bumpers, they typically are not blended as they tend to use a flex agent in the paint as the material expands more in the heat. As a result, it's not uncommon to see a urethane bumper that doesn't quite match the rest of the car. This would likely be more prevailant in metallic and pearl paints.
As for Body kits, and bumpers, they typically are not blended as they tend to use a flex agent in the paint as the material expands more in the heat. As a result, it's not uncommon to see a urethane bumper that doesn't quite match the rest of the car. This would likely be more prevailant in metallic and pearl paints.
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