Page 1 of 1

Old English touch up too light colour

Posted: Sun May 11, 2025 10:48 am
by petejam
Hi I have a Morris and checked the paint code and it matches old English white but the touch up from ESM is a lighter colour are there different shades thanks

Re: Old English touch up too light colour

Posted: Sun May 11, 2025 6:53 pm
by svenedin
I don't know specifically about OEW but for Smoke Grey (a light blue) there seems to be considerable variation (my car is Smoke Grey). I think the problem is that as paint ages, the shade changes. My car has bleached in the sun but I notice that white shades of house paint tend to yellow with age (which I assume is surface oxidation and dirt). Added to this, I do wonder how consistent BMC was with paint shades. ESM told me that BMC changed paint suppliers during the long production run of the Minor. Some cars are painted in paint that was supplied by ICI but who the other suppliers were I do not know.

Have a look to see if you can find a painted surface in a hidden area. You may be surprised how much this differs from the paint colour on the outside of the car.

Stephen

Re: Old English touch up too light colour

Posted: Wed May 14, 2025 11:16 am
by exlkrs
WT-3 is the code, I've never had a problem with.

Re: Old English touch up too light colour

Posted: Wed May 14, 2025 1:02 pm
by geoberni
petejam wrote: Sun May 11, 2025 10:48 am Hi I have a Morris and checked the paint code and it matches old English white but the touch up from ESM is a lighter colour are there different shades thanks
Cars (or anything painted) fade with age, if you're trying to use a new touch up on a car with 20, 30, ....70 years of fading, it's ain't ever gonna match....

Re: Old English touch up too light colour

Posted: Wed May 14, 2025 8:57 pm
by firedrake1942
You think you have got problems... try matching Clarendon Grey... I have seen 5 different shades although ESM's rattle cans are a good match for mine. If I need to brush any bits I spray into the can top and use that paint.