Beauty is in the eye of the beholder and being a bit of a originalist would normally continue with the original colour of Lotus yellow over white.
However I notice that many cars have been repainted in a colour other than the original on which it was supplied.
It has got me thinking (the shell is due for repaint at the end of the summer) so there is some time before making this decision.
My family are probably bored with my showing them the options (from photos of the various colours) so as a bit of fun I thought to see what the suggestions are from those who have the passion!
I like the bright colours and have closed down the options to red, pistachio and yellow all of them over white.
There do seem to be many in the red and yellow so I’m rather tempted to go for pistachio - I followed such a dhc along the Sussex lanes after the Goodwood festival a few years back and it was very fetching.
When I visited Paul Matty’s a few weeks back they had all three colours and I came away with a neck and neck feeling toward the yellow and the pistachio!
I would go the Pistachio, but in my case I was pretty much told it could result in divorce or wild revenge spending. Not for everyone for sure, but unique and in the period. Besides, the two tone Sprint blunts the shock. Notice Tawny did not make your short list; go figure!
My Two Cent’s Worth.
If you’re not going original… why not a solid body color of your liking? French Blue comes to mind, or solid BRG with some yellow trim, anything but Burnt Sand, two toned or not… Red and White reminds me of Tobacco.
Eric
The question of colour is down to personal taste in the end. However, a car painted in the exact colour it left the factory will be worth more than a car painted a different or even non-original colour, all other things being equal. Yellow over white is very nice, so why not go for it? Having said this, all the original two colour paint schemes for the Sprint are very nice and make the car stand out. It is classic period style.
Pistacchio Green is perky and bright, will look super I think.
Another thought goes like this: As a custodian of a classic car you are obliged to recreate the car as it was built by the factory. You “owe” that to the car and to the people who designed and built it and to the guy who ordered it in the first place. These cars are part of popular culture, they must be preserved in period style. Okay, this is a very strict view, but a there is something to it…
To sum it up:
You may paint the car in a different colour than it was built; this colour must be an original Lotus colour though.
You may not create you own paint scheme just because you happen to like this colour or that colour.
Jolly / cues critics who willl point out these cars got repainted early in their lifes anyway…
This is a very tricky question. Not red because of tobacco connotations. It’s either original yellow or groovy Pistachio. I like Pistachio a lot; my S3 coupe (see the gallery) is in that colour all over and it’s a great conversation piece. It’s clearly not the original colour because the car predates Pistachio’s availability, but it has been Pistachio for more than half its life. Normally I’d favour keeping a car its original colour, but when that colour is Burnt Sand, as mine was, it’s not really an option.
You, however, have the advantage of a good original colour. I think you’re also keen on originality, so if you went the Pistachio route you might, while enjoying your Sprint’s new hue, have a nagging regret that you didn’t keep it as created by Lotus. Verdict: stick with the yellow, for originality, continuity and the fact that it will still look terrific.
Maybe so - but only at Lotus gatherings. How many do you see out and about in everyday traffic? None would be near enough to the correct answer - and how many cars other than the Lotus Elan do you see in red-over-white or yellow-over-white? The square root of none comes to mind.
Then again, you could always try painting it silver…
I’m with John on this, though I fully recognise your right to paint your car any colour you wish!
I also like that saying ‘A car is only original once’. In fact, I noticed the other month a short review of a book on American cars with a similar title in one of the mags. Nothing like driving a car with the patina of the 1970s on today’s roads - except perhaps a 1930s Bugatti or Frazer Nash!
I can well imagine turning up at the paint shop still undecided with my heart set on Pistachio but hearing ‘yellow’ pass my lips…
This whole rebuild project has been absorbing and fascinating probably need a second one to perfect the experience - probably one in Pistachio and probably a series 1 with hub caps and round rear lights…
Pistacchio on the baby Elans for me…I am however about to spray mine in this colour…as you can see, originality is not a priority for me! I also had the last minute change of heart at the paint shop…I saw the Mito flash past me on the M1 on Friday and rang them up immmediatley to tell them to cancel the paint order I placed with them! Sleepless nights all the way when you are not absolutley convinced about your choice of colour and the deadline looms. I would have been gutted if I had seen the Mito blue for the first time if I had just had it finished in a Mazda blue.
Keep it yellow, Richard!! This is one of the last brochures produced for the Sprint, and the colour the factory selected to show the car off was of course YELLOW. The Pistachio, as fab as it is, is consigned to the back sheet.
I quite like that as a quote, our cars are now so old that many of them have been re-incarnated several times; to say the least mine which went through a metamorphis under my evil hands.
I did however retain so many of its original parts that it could be returned to a sensible form of originality.
(He says pleadingly to “the majority”)
As far as colour is concerned, my S4 was various shades of yellow all at once.(Not so great paint repairs over the years)
My then wife nicknamed the car “Acne”
Upon seeing the rebuilt “Blue” car she asked why I’d changed the colour?
Well you fathom it out, I gave up years ago
Good luck in your colour quest, I hate to admit that the most difficult part of the extensive rebuild was the choice of colour.
Not so “Butch” are we
I wonder if any ultra purists also decline to update their homes, their wardrobes, their diets etc. 'Fill the parafin lamps, Ethel - I’ll get the coal and we’ll have a nice corned beef and suet dumpling dinner. By ‘eck, me britches are in need of a ruddy good darning!’
Well I still have my original chassis, suspension, steering, engine - brakes still pretty good, but apart from being generally tired all round and head lamp range not so good the major problem is with the teeth! as mentioned elsewhere only original once…
Today - yellow ahead by a whisker ‘but still plenty of time to change’
So if we all follow this line of action - fitting UPVC windows in a 17th century cottage is Ok & the best way forward !
RE the Colour - keep to an original Lotus colour, that was a option at the time the car was produced. It`s obviously down to personal taste but Yellow is good for me.
For me the only option is Gold leaf colours for a sprint but thats from a guy with a JPS blacvk and gold esprit a gold leaf S4 and a Renault F1 yellow plus 2 so you may spot the pattern in my preferences.
Flatcap, absoltuley not! I replaced my single glazed windows with hardwood double glazed. Looks just as good but is certainly not original. One can update tastefully and have much more freedom than being restricted to the past.
Sometimes, Rich, the old stuff is actually better than the new. My house was built in 1450, and is warm in winter and cool in summer…and it’s been around for knocking on 600 years. The only mods are reversible (water, electricity and underfloor central heating), so come the revolution, we’ll go back to sheep downstairs to keep warm, and the well. And I’m not about to tart it up to look like a modern Barrets home
As for original cars vs modified, well, for every 100 modified / tarted up old classic bangers out there, there’s only 1 original car. But it’s worth doing. The sound and smell of a Bugatti Type 37 in original form, compared to one with a faster, more efficient BMW diesel turbo upgrade…well, it has just got to be worth the effort of keeping it all original.
Imagine all those steam engines in trains and lorries being upgraded to diesel as well…what a joyful thought. It’s a pain in the butt having to fire up the boiler a few hours before you want to get going I’m sure, but some folks love to do it, and I quite like to see them running along as well.
As for the colour on that little Alfa, well, it suits the Alfa. It couldn’t look any more ridiculous, so a baby blue metalic wash goes quite well. It will look horrendous on an Elan!!! But you pays your money… I’m reminded of a chum who bought a new TVR Griff back in the 90s…in Aston Villa colours. The dealer tried to disuade him, the factory tried to disuade him, but he ordered it anyway. He thought it looked good, but nobody else did. When he came to trade it in, the best offer he got was bottom book less ?8000…the price of stripping off the paint and re-painting the car.
But your Elan would look different, and would certainly be in demand for Gay Pride parades up and down the land.