Touch up paint for Vintage bikes ?
I'm wondering if anyone has tried to find touch up paint for their Vintage bike ? At this point I don't want to repaint the whole bike instead just touch up a few places. I have always loved the color of blue my 64 Supersport is. The other day I was sitting next to a late model Camry that looked very close to my bikes color. I was thinking I could just get a tube of touch up from Toyota and use it on my bike. I know it wouldn't be perfect but it might be really close. Anyone else come up with another way. It would be nice if a computer color match could be done but probably not possible. I appreciate everyone's thoughts and comments.
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There's others as well.
https://www.koolestuff.com/store/p65...chuppaint.html |
Testors® modeling enamel, found at hobby stores, comes in hundreds of colors and can be mixed to match almost any frame. It's very durable once applied.
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Originally Posted by dedhed
(Post 22458202)
There's others as well.
https://www.koolestuff.com/store/p65...chuppaint.html |
Originally Posted by Rolla
(Post 22458207)
Testors® modeling enamel, found at hobby stores, comes in hundreds of colors and can be mixed to match almost any frame. It's very durable once applied.
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I'd be very surprised if the Schwinn touch-up paint matched the paint of a nearly 60 yo bike. Paints fade. Yours might be a long ways from what is was when new. If you like it, I think you are probably better off matching what you've got rather than going through all the work and finding the touch-ups stand out like sore thumbs.
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Originally Posted by 79pmooney
(Post 22458609)
I'd be very surprised if the Schwinn touch-up paint matched the paint of a nearly 60 yo bike. Paints fade. Yours might be a long ways from what is was when new. If you like it, I think you are probably better off matching what you've got rather than going through all the work and finding the touch-ups stand out like sore thumbs.
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Originally Posted by Rolla
(Post 22458207)
Testors® modeling enamel, found at hobby stores, comes in hundreds of colors and can be mixed to match almost any frame. It's very durable once applied.
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I'm sure it can be done if you are skillful enough but think about this: There's "perfect match" and there's "not exactly". "Not exactly" usually draws your attention to the blemish that you are trying to hide.
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If your bike looks something like the one below, I'd buy an assortment of different blues and start mixing small amounts to see if you can get it close.
https://cimg8.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...f0fa9c013f.png https://cimg9.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...00ae16d617.png |
Nail polish. Very durable and so many colors.
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Originally Posted by Rolla
(Post 22458729)
If your bike looks something like the one below, I'd buy an assortment of different blues and start mixing small amounts to see if you can get it close.
https://cimg8.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...f0fa9c013f.png https://cimg9.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...00ae16d617.png |
Current Testors paint does not seem as durable as in the past. Recently I bought some at Hobby Lobby for touching up a frame and was surprised when Johnsons paste wax dissolved it. And no, the Testors paint was not their water-based stuff.
Montana Colors Hardcore spray paint is gloss finish and durable. It's made for graffiti artists and available at Blick Art. |
Originally Posted by Rolla
(Post 22458207)
Testors® modeling enamel, found at hobby stores, comes in hundreds of colors and can be mixed to match almost any frame. It's very durable once applied.
With vintage paint you can match the color exactly, but matching the years of sun fade, etc. is where you get a real challenge. |
Originally Posted by spelger
(Post 22458736)
Nail polish. Very durable and so many colors.
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Originally Posted by spelger
(Post 22458736)
Nail polish. Very durable and so many colors.
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Originally Posted by Causual_Cyclist
(Post 22459022)
Agreed, nail polish shops typically allow you to try the colours at the shop itself. I'll recommend chipping a small piece of the paint from some inconspicuous spot like the bottom bracket and using that to colour match. This ensures that the touch up matchs your current bike paint
I mean, seriously, I thought everyone used nail polish if they need to fix a scratched bike frame. |
Originally Posted by Koyote
(Post 22460785)
Just take your bike right into the drugstore and find the right color.
I mean, seriously, I thought everyone used nail polish if they need to fix a scratched bike frame. |
Originally Posted by 1964Supersport
(Post 22460884)
I've been away from bikes for a lot of years, I'm not up on everything.
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