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Old Humrol Enamel numbers?

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  • Modler bob
    SMF Supporters
    • May 2022
    • 277

    #1

    Old Humrol Enamel numbers?

    I was looking through some very old Humbrol Enamel paint I still have from years ago.
    I opened a few (eventually) and I have one tin that looks matt green, number 108. So looked at the PDF colour chart I got online, and it's not there :flushed:
    I googled the number etc etc...No luck.
    I did want cockpit green, and I thought this might do.
    Sorry about the drivel :smiling3: ...
    My reason for posting is....What colour is Humbrol No 108, anyone?
  • Airborne01
    • Mar 2021
    • 3968
    • Steve
    • Essex

    #2
    Just called WW1 Green according to my (old) Humbrol reference chart mate - your guess is as good as mlne!
    Steve

    Comment

    • adt70hk
      SMF Supporters
      • Sep 2019
      • 10409

      #3
      Quick search shows it as WW1 green, whatever that was...... There are quite a few references to it....I just searched 'Humbrol 108'.

      Your daily scale modeling tool - search, connect and stay up to date. Scalemates, scale modeling database | stash manager

      Comment

      • Tim Marlow
        SMF Supporters
        • Apr 2018
        • 18903
        • Tim
        • Somerset UK

        #4
        Try here
        Paint list of Humbrol. Reference database, color charts and stash management for all the colors from Humbrol

        Looks like that’s WW1 green. I think I’ve got 107 WW1 purple upstairs somewhere

        Comment

        • Tim Marlow
          SMF Supporters
          • Apr 2018
          • 18903
          • Tim
          • Somerset UK

          #5
          Well Andrew beat me to it, and his link came up when I posted mine LOL….
          I think it’s for WW1 aircraft. The purple certainly is. it’s made for German WW1 aircraft wings.

          Comment

          • Tim Marlow
            SMF Supporters
            • Apr 2018
            • 18903
            • Tim
            • Somerset UK

            #6
            This is the sort of thing I mean. It could well be the green to go with that purple.
            Click image for larger version

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            Comment

            • Guest

              #7
              I might as well quickly photograph the 1980s Humbrol paint chart I have had for a long time and post it here:

              [ATTACH]460747[/ATTACH][ATTACH]460748[/ATTACH][ATTACH]460749[/ATTACH][ATTACH]460750[/ATTACH][ATTACH]460751[/ATTACH][ATTACH]460752[/ATTACH][ATTACH]460753[/ATTACH][ATTACH]460754[/ATTACH][ATTACH]460755[/ATTACH][ATTACH]460756[/ATTACH][ATTACH]460757[/ATTACH]

              These are actual paint chips, not printed approximations, which is why it cost me 5 guilders sometime in the 1980s instead of being free at every model shop, like the printed version was

              Warning: Do not use this as an accurate colour reference! The pages were photographed in the shade in late afternoon, bright sunlight, which has distorted them compared to the actual colours of the paint chips — as you can tell by the background being pale bluish rather than the white the paper actually is.

              Comment

              • Modler bob
                SMF Supporters
                • May 2022
                • 277

                #8
                Thanks guys.
                Interesting, the PDF chart I have starts from number 1 obviously then goes straight to 23 (duck egg blue)
                There are a few more missing from this chart.
                I wondered if it has anything to do with the ban on old humbrol and waiting to the new stock, I was informed it would be this September :astonished:

                Comment

                • Tim Marlow
                  SMF Supporters
                  • Apr 2018
                  • 18903
                  • Tim
                  • Somerset UK

                  #9
                  Using Jakko’s chart, and this resource….
                  Paint list of Humbrol Authentic Colours. Reference database, color charts and stash management for all the colors from Humbrol Authentic Colours

                  Humbrol 108 is the standard range adoption of authenticolour HB15, RFC green, so there we go…..

                  Comment

                  • Neil Merryweather
                    SMF Supporters
                    • Dec 2018
                    • 5185
                    • London

                    #10
                    Blimey there are some anoraks on this forum, and thank God for that! :nerd: :tears-of-joy:

                    Comment

                    • Guest

                      #11
                      Originally posted by Tim Marlow
                      Humbrol 108 is the standard range adoption of authenticolour HB15, RFC green
                      I also use those conversion charts mostly the other way than they were intended

                      Comment

                      • Tim Marlow
                        SMF Supporters
                        • Apr 2018
                        • 18903
                        • Tim
                        • Somerset UK

                        #12
                        Originally posted by Neil Merryweather
                        Blimey there are some anoraks on this forum, and thank God for that! :nerd: :tears-of-joy:
                        Not an anorak Neil, but I do have a very retentive memory for totally inconsequential trivia :tongue-out3: .
                        Authenticolour was, in my opinion, the best range of paint that Humbrol ever produced. Brushed superbly, dried quickly, and covered well. Compared to the modern stuff it was head, shoulders, and a very tall hat above it.

                        Comment

                        • Neil Merryweather
                          SMF Supporters
                          • Dec 2018
                          • 5185
                          • London

                          #13
                          Originally posted by Tim Marlow
                          Not an anorak Neil, but I do have a very retentive memory for totally inconsequential trivia :tongue-out3: .
                          Authenticolour was, in my opinion, the best range of paint that Humbrol ever produced. Brushed superbly, dried quickly, and covered well. Compared to the modern stuff it was head, shoulders, and a very tall hat above it.
                          Oh I absolutely agree. And it smelled so good,too!

                          Comment

                          • adt70hk
                            SMF Supporters
                            • Sep 2019
                            • 10409

                            #14
                            When I came back to the hobby I discovered that my mum had kept my old modelling box in the loft where it sat for 20 years.

                            In it were three three 'authentic' tinlets....HX1 Dark Green, HM04 Panzer Grey and HM06 Field Grey and they were still nearly perfect!

                            Comment

                            • Guest

                              #15
                              Originally posted by Tim Marlow
                              Authenticolour was, in my opinion, the best range of paint that Humbrol ever produced. Brushed superbly, dried quickly, and covered well. Compared to the modern stuff it was head, shoulders, and a very tall hat above it.
                              Agreed. I never was in a position to use that range when it was around originally, when I started painting models the only paint I could buy was numbered Humbrol but I did sometimes see references to Humbrol paints with letter-number codes instead, and remember wondering what that was.

                              Years ago (probably something like ten by now), I bought a couple of dozen old tins, all with those number-letter codes and some dating back to the 1960s (according to this page), and occasionally use them when I think enamels will work best for what I’m trying to achieve. If this paint were still available, I would buy it without hesitation over any more recent enamels I’ve ever used.

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