Excellent, excellent work Francisco!
Most detailers would chopped that dry brittle, antique single stage paint up by attacking it first with a compound when what it really needed was to FIRST be rejuvenated using the oils in the #7 Show Car Glaze.
I saw a someone ask "why" you applied and worked the #7 first so for everyone reading this into the future here's why.
First... it's an option. You don't have to do this. I do and I teach others to do it when it's IMPORTANT to try to do everything possible to preserve and restore, (that's two things), the original paint. Most production and hack detailers would simply compound it.
Second... the BIG IDEA is to take dry, brittle antique paint and make it more workable before you work on it.
By gorging the paint with the oils in the #7 Show Car Glaze and letting the product sit on the surface so the oils penetrate into the paint you do two things,
1. You moisturize the paint. The oils seep and penetrated INTO the paint and revitalize it making it safer to then abrade.
2. The oils revitalize the pigments and it is this little function that these oils are unique for that restores and brings out the full richness of color.
I've used this technique ever since discovering the unique characteristics about the unique oils used to create this product in the early 1900's and I've been told the formula is unchanged since it was perfected about the time the Model T was introduced which was 1908.
This product has been around as long as single stage paints. There is no other product on the market today that I know of that can make that claim not counting Meguiar's #1, #3. I think #5 came out in the 1950's and it's possible all 4 of these products are still as they were when they were created.
Here's a project that Francisco and I knocked out together, one of these days I'll go through all the pictures and create a write-up worthy of this projects. We did the same #7 treatment to this car and the paint literally looked like it was factory new when we were finished.
1955 DeSoto Firedome - Antique Single Stage Paint Restoration
Here's a few before, process and after shots... I'd like to thank PJ, the owner for trusting us with his car and I'd also like to thank Fransisco for being part of the team and all his hard work to transform this car from an ugly duckling to a car that looks like it just rolled out of the show room from a DeSoto Dealership in 1955!
The only editing I did to any of these pictures is to crop out the fluff and resize to 800 pixels wide.
Before
This picture was taking with my trusty, dusty Canon Rebel on the A-DEP setting (Automatic Depth), with the flash on. Inside the building, this is exactly what the paint looked like at the time of the photo.
After
This picture was taking with my trusty, dusty Canon Rebel on the A-DEP setting with the Flash on. Inside the building, this is exactly what the paint looked like at the time of the photo.
Before
This picture was taking with my trusty, dusty Canon Rebel on the A-DEP setting with the Flash on. Inside the building, this is exactly what the paint looked like at the time of the photo.
After
This picture was taken outside in full sun around 2:00pm on Saturday, May 25th using my trusty, dusty Canon Rebel on the "Full Auto" setting.
This is what the paint looks like in full sun to the naked eye.
Process...
Here's Fransisco machine polishing the paint using Pinnacle Advanced Swirl Remover on an 6.5" Orange CCS Foam Cutting Pad on the Flex 3401.
Full write-up as soon as I can carve out the time...
