Making a difficult color pop question

YankeeFan

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Polishing certain colors like a black or a pearl blue seems to give payback in terms of getting good reflection, using power lock and Wolfgang Fuzion to have it shine bright. But how 'bout a color like Honda's Urban Titanium Metallic? I can get good reflection but just can't get that wet look. As we all stood at the car, taking a 3/4 view, its just there.....blah. Am I doing something wrong, other product(s) to use, etc.? Polished with FG400 with rotary, than 3500 with Flex DA.

Thanks,
Howard
 
Some colors such as the many variations of silver just sorta suck. Lol. I'm sorry but that's the truth.

I polished this Kia a couple of weeks ago and ended up using 3 different polishes around the vehicle and not 1 of them made a noticeable difference as far as wow factor. Kinda frustrating dealing with these sort of silver colored vehicles...

e7cdd5b4afd8a51f1a3b755884016234.jpg
 
At least white can literally "clean" or "brighten up"... Most of the time these metalic silver vehicles do absolutely nothing.
 
Some colors such as the many variations of silver just sorta suck. Lol. I'm sorry but that's the truth.

I polished this Kia a couple of weeks ago and ended up using 3 different polishes around the vehicle and not 1 of them made a noticeable difference as far as wow factor. Kinda frustrating dealing with these sort of silver colored vehicles...

e7cdd5b4afd8a51f1a3b755884016234.jpg

Yep, this is exactly what I am getting............bummer!
 
Yep, this is exactly what I am getting............bummer!

I detailed that whole car and didn't even bother polishing the hood... That's how much of a non factor the polishing was doing. Lol.
 
Oftentimes it's possible to experience a "deeper" appearance on lightly colored paintwork by introducing darker elements around the subject. Take a look at a white or silver hood of a vehicle that is in an open garage at noon and depth can be more easily discerned - the physical properties of the surface don't change of course, but if the surface is lit by strong ambient light and the surrounding area is darker than the paint color then it will show pronounced reflections. Lighter elements around dark paintwork help to cause a similar effect.

Here's the hood of a white Scat Pack.

View attachment 59489

Here's the passenger side.

View attachment 59491

When you see the Challenger in direct light it just looks white - nothing fancy at all. However, if you catch the car in shadow, and at the right angle, it sure looks nice. :)
 
I find this to be the case with my light-medium grey metallic paint. It shines like crazy, but I don't think it can ever produce that "perfect mirror" like reflection.

I'm ok with it though, because you need a detective to locate swirls in the paint whereas you can see swirls in darker paint from 30 feet away.
 
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