I posed the question as a kind of academic attempt at perspective regarding colors and our perceptions of them. I have already painted everything I have that needs the Erie gray/green. Each example is several colors or shades or tints: under incandescant light, or flourescent, or outside in direct sunlight. And several of them differ. And I don't care. I'm happy with the idea that paints weather with time and washing. Pure, matching sets of equipment were so rare as to be unrealistic. I have always wondered if the Erie, pressed for a color choice by the EMD stylists, didn't simply look at some nearby structure and decide that a rich green and a greyish color were a nice combination. I guess we're lucky they didn't hit on the red door and sash trim color for the striping. Yuck! Randy Brown - -------------------------------------------------------------- Randy, a couple weeks ago you threw out a quick question, something like, "what about Erie gray-green". . . That TTG light color is a bit of a mystery and is portrayed differently. I have models where it is definitely a light GREEN and others where it looks more like a greenish GRAY. The color is variously described as light green or gray-green, depending on the eyeball. I have a ConCor baggage car from 20 (?) years ago that has the TTG down pretty well -- but the package refers to Erie Dark Green and "CREAM". Joe Braun The Erie Lackawanna Mailing List Sponsored by the ELH&TS http://www.elhts.org To Unsubscribe: http://lists.elhts.org/erielackunsub.html ------------------------------
This HTML page is © 2000-2008 Blue Moon Online System and The Railfan Network
This page and the data contained therein may not be reproduced
for any form of commercial use without the explicit permission
of J. Henry Priebe Jr. or his duly authorized agent.