A Reflection On Perfection
1. Lighting - You have to be able to identify imperfections. If the paint, glass, trim, metal, wheels, rubber, plastic, vinyl etc etc are corrected to as close as perfect as possible under high intensity lighting from every angle possible, it will look perfect under natural lighting. Perfect paint = shiniest paint. This to me is one of...if not the absolute most important. If you can`t see it, you can`t correct it.
2. Tools/Chemicals - You need the right tools for the job. A concours level detail can`t be performed with a single tool. Almost every new client always tell me something along the lines of "man you bring a lot of stuff!", and I wish I could bring more. You want the carpets cleaned as good as possible? You need an extractor. You want the paint polished the best way possible? You need a DA, and you might need a rotary, and of course in a range of sizes. Etc etc
3. A perfect canvas - Some paint cannot be saved. Whether it`s a RID here or a wrinkle there, some paint just comes out of the paint booth destined to never reach that 100% mark. Mike Phillips talked about this in a series following a build ("something in the heartland"....I`ll link it when I find it) for a car that wanted perfect black paint. Perfect paint starts at the paint booth and works it`s way up from the guy who cuts the paint all the way to the final detailer. In the real world I think most of the time perfect paint is unreasonable. I imagine if you take a bulb into every nook and crannie on even something like a Riddler award winner, you`d find plenty of minor imperfections. I know some people who have. So the "chase" is to get the paint as perfect as possible, while usually trying our best to ignore the stubborn imperfections and minimizing them as much as possible.
4. Time/Experience - Rome wasn`t built in a day. Even if your body isn`t tired, sometimes you can start to lose focus or your eyes just start getting tired. It takes time to chase perfection. It also takes experience to know how to use everything you have to achieve perfect paint. You can give someone everything they need in the world to succeed, but they still have to be able to make it happen.
I`ve been lucky enough to hang around arguably some of the best detailers in the industry, and I`ve had to pickup my jaw off the floor on more than one occasion. Robert DiTerlizzi`s CQuartz Finest job on a Miranda Built Chevelle comes to mind. A coworker and I inspected the paint while trying not to drool on it and that paint looked ridiculous. I can`t count how many times I`ve seen Mike Phillips get a car to show car top tier level (seriously that guy is a beast lol). I think with these 4 things you can get your paint looking really really really really really good.