Originally Posted by illinoiscentral:
Maybe somebody with more experience can pipe up here but ....
Its pretty easy to mess up color.
1. Your camera is messing it up. It tries to correct color based on the lighting, but its never really sure. You can solve that one with something called a white balance card, its a gray colored card that is equal parts red, green, and blue (or is the green yellow, I can never remember), then you use white balance in your camera or shoot RAW and fix in your computer.
2. Your computer monitor is screwing it up, and I don't know how to fix that one.
3. And then whatever MTH uses to design it might have been screwed up.
4. Then however they got the color might have screwed it up.
Maybe manufacturers could list what color (is the company Pantone? ) they intend to match?
If you were in the caboose obviously you know its wrong.
The subject of color comes up fairly often. I like to use the following example. Same locomotive, different lighting.
Standard 4' cool white florescent fixtures, cool white CFL's in refectors, daylight CFL's in reflectors. So, which one is correct? If I took the model outside, I'd get a different result.
Now, a prototype photo for reference:
The color is officially "aluminum," which is why in the early model railroading days CB&Q F unit models were painted silver.
Rusty