It has what is commonly referred to in these parts as a 'Mexican" restoration. I am sure that is not meant to be complimentary, but I actually like the description. As for the folks in SA, since it was me counting the votes, and I'm club secretary, too, I guess they tolerate the old girl just fine. Hugh San Antonio. ----- Original Message ----- From: "D. Dardalis" <dardal@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> To: <mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Sunday, March 03, 2002 11:26 AM Subject: Re: IML: '57; how scarce? > At 12:41 AM 3/3/2002 -0600, you wrote: > >I am not trying to be a snob in reverse. More than having a thing for all > >Imperials, I really just have a thing for MY Imperial. Cosmetically, mine > >is pretty far gone, although it is not rusty at all and the chrome is really > >good. > >Of course, the third way > >is simply to do the best I can with what I have and enjoy the heck out of it > >as often as possible. > > Hugh, the first time I saw your "paint job" I was a bit "surprised". But > then again, it doesn't really look that bad. Its definitely unique, and it > gives your car a really unique character. Your Miss Blueberry has a real > tough, "don't mess with me" type of look. The standard faded luxury car > look is paint that is still shiny in places but fading in others. Your 58 > is nothing like that. Also, this paint finish totally separates you from > the typical "restorer" that keeps his car in the garage and babies it > weekend after weekend so it looks "better than new". Too bad the fellows > in the SA Mopar show last October totally missed that. It may be best to > keep your car like that, rather than apply a cheap shiny paint job, till > you are ready to have a truly professional paint job. Till then, just keep > on driving it, that's what it was designed for! > D^2 > > > > >