- Joined
- Jul 16, 2020
- Messages
- 207
Amen. I’ll add - the “classic cars” that show up for sale on Craigslist and Facebook marketplace that are painted Halloween orange, purple, snot green, baby poop mustard yellow, and so on. Wouldn’t it have been just as easy to paint the car from a factory color code chart?Just because you can, it doesn't always mean that you should...
True if you are factory restoring and calling/labeling it as such. Lame if you pick a color I don't like. But silly to think people shouldn't paint cars whatever color. It's not like a new thing to make a cool color hot rod.Amen. I’ll add - the “classic cars” that show up for sale on Craigslist and Facebook marketplace that are painted Halloween orange, purple, snot green, baby poop mustard yellow, and so on. Wouldn’t it have been just as easy to paint the car from a factory color code chart?
You like what you like… But you can’t ask Mecum auction prices for a car painted in a “cool” color i.e., clown car. To each his own.True if you are factory restoring and calling/labeling it as such. Lame if you pick a color I don't like. But silly to think people shouldn't paint cars whatever color. It's not like a new thing to make a cool color hot rod.
This is an example of a nice car ruined:You like what you like… But you can’t ask Mecum auction prices for a car painted in a “cool” color i.e., clown car. To each his own.
I agree if auctioning as a full factory restore. As I stated.You like what you like… But you can’t ask Mecum auction prices for a car painted in a “cool” color i.e., clown car. To each his own.
My exact thought.If that wasn't a prop piece from Boogie Nights, it should have been.
Just what I always wanted…
That one need to careful. Go over 90 and stuff might fly off!!
I would Sooo steal that puppy and take it to Vegas!