I have a cold, again, because of this sodding winter. That meant we had to cancel our plans for picking the Rover carcass for the few bits I need but it's okay, it turns out the weather would have cancelled it for us anyway.
20180317-01 by
Angyl Roper, on Flickr
I don't feel too bad about being ill because of that, there's no way any of us wanted to do anything outdoors in that weather, even if well. Previously, I'd bought some more of the Simply Spray dye I used to refresh the Princess' carpet because I didn't want a dark grey carpet in the Rover. Instead, I wanted a dark red carpet. Now, I'm aware that dye usually has to go over a lighter colour and I was taking a risk by using a hue that was about in the same place as the old colour. There was a very good chance this wouldn't work, but there was realy only one way to find out. First coat always goes on alarmingly bright and certainly more purple than I fancied.
20180317-02 by
Angyl Roper, on Flickr
Second and third coats mellowed out considerably and once dry it was exactly the colour I wanted. Looks a little brown here because of the odd lighting in that room.
20180317-03 by
Angyl Roper, on Flickr
The reason for this colour change is partly personal taste, but mostly to match the new interior that I'd picked up from fellow R8 club member, who has an absolutely spotless R8 Tourer in Nightfire Red (sadly too dark to get a photo when I visited to collect the interior). I do really like the interior already in my car, and it's in reasonable shape. The interior I wanted was either the one with red inserts that only seemed to come in the Cabriolet or the half leather with black chevron cloth. Happily, I got the latter in the form of all the seats and door cards. They are for a hatchback rather than a saloon, this is actually also what I wanted since I'm converting my saloon to folding rear seats using hatchback parts that pretty much bolt straight in since the body tubs are essentially the same.
20180317-04 by
Angyl Roper, on Flickr
I wanted it to also look factory inside without being a factory option, so that's why the burgundy carpet. It picks up the colour fleck (burgundy, blue, and green) in the seats. It's really subtle and nobody would normally notice. Generally, if you can pick up a small detail like this and incorporate it into a personalised interior, it doesn't look personalised for some reason. Instead it ends up looking like a factory option. It also looks less cheap than if you had a plain black carpet with plain black seats. There's probably some sort of colour theory thing about this that explains just why it is.
20180317-05 by
Angyl Roper, on Flickr