OK, I've been wanting to paint the datsun replica with something that's cheap and readily available anywhere. Better yet if I can get it off the shelf and it doesn't require any color/tint mixing. This is the look I want to imitate.

This means I need to find a dark brown and a warm tan that are compatible with each other....I used a paint brush to cover some of the tubes that will be behind the firewall[*] with rustoleum professional in Leather Brown. It is a nice deep chocolate color that I'm very happy with. The added bonus is that rustoleum offers this color as one of their "Professional" paints, and that means I can use Dr. Hess's painting method with it.
Unfortunately, the tan is proving to be more difficult. I the closest thing that Lowe's had was Rustoleum Professional in Almond. I got a pint to play with and it is WAY too light....it looks like cream. The place I buy my steel carries
"RUST-OLEUM 865 DUNES TAN", which sounds more promising.
Two questions for you guys:
1) Can I use the same proportions of mineral spirits for the two types if I shoot part of the car in Rustoleum and part of it in Rustoleum Professional?
2) Can I put one on top of the other (i.e. like a chocolate brown stripe along the top of a tan door)
3) have any of you used the "dunes tan" color, and can you post pictures of it? Before buying and using it, I'd like to see how similar the color is to the photo above.
[*] - I figured that since they are out of sight, that was a good spot to test paints on.

and another of the Dunes Tan and the Almond side by side
Those photos are both wet paint, thrown on with a brush, so the dry colors probably differ a bit. Still, the pictures nicely illustrate the difference in the two colors, and the Dunes Tan is clearly a lot closer to the look I'm trying for.





