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- Emira on order
He looks more like the ambassador’s bodyguard
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Interesting, because that's a 4 bangerYes that’s the one!
Interesting, because that's a 4 banger
If anyone has access to someone high up at Lotus, please forward Porter's entire post. Absolutely maddening that they're now producing customer cars but refuse to release a photo of the actual paint colors. It's really not that hard! Lotus please put your Instagram account to some good use here.As it is, nobody with a deposit down knows what DV looks like at this point, in April of 2022, unless you've physically been to the factory and been granted special access. And then you can't take pictures, you can only describe it to other people subjectively. It's infuriating.
Does anyone at Lotus understand how this intentional obfuscation translates at the customer level? Or do they simply not care?
I agree and have said this multiple times to Scott and Matt. The Lotus response is always “we’ll publish photos soon” (said every few weeks since October) and “the configurator is a good representation of the colours”.Man, I really wish the color on this Elise Sport 220 displayed at the Thailand International Motor Expo 2021 was what they had used as "Dark Verdant". It would have been a winner on every conceivable level.
View attachment 4314
Here are some bigger images of the same car, with more detail but different color balance:
And here's a shot of the rear and hood on Lotus Thailand's Instagram which I think might be the best photos of it. Incredible dark metallic green.
- https://carvariety.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/LOTUS-ELISE-SPORT-220-2.jpg
- https://th.carro.co/blog/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/Lotus-Elise-220-Sport.jpg
- https://autolifethailand.tv/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/Lotus-Elise_2.jpg
I would have spec'd DV for my own car if Lotus had simply showed this car and said it was DV. Is it the color? Who knows!! The guesswork of paint disc samples so far have indicated it's a near-black color with only a tiny hint of green, and the online configurator shows a different, very dark near-black forest green, which is nothing like the paint discs from the roadshow (which are ultra dark blue-green) and also nothing like this Elise. Yet the DV car photographed going to Top Gear looks more like this Elise! In other words, very clearly green - a complex dark green color, but not ultra-dark black-green. It's crazy.
As it is, nobody with a deposit down knows what DV looks like at this point, in April of 2022, unless you've physically been to the factory and been granted special access. And then you can't take pictures, you can only describe it to other people subjectively. It's infuriating.
Does anyone at Lotus understand how this intentional obfuscation translates at the customer level? Or do they simply not care?
The new paints they're using have a much deeper, richer color tone to them than the old paints. I think few if any have spent as much time as I have looking at paint samples, trying to come to grips with these colors. Because of the way they play with light, they're VERY hard to reproduce in a render. I believe the images below are the best momentary examples of how this color is going to look as an overall average. I believe their new configurator has it pretty darned close.
Notice the amount of metal flake that's in this paint, and how quickly it transitions from bright to dark.
Outside shot of the planform:
View attachment 4319
Inside shot of the planform:
View attachment 4318
Lotus configurator; look at the area above the bottom of the door, and compare that to the planforms.
View attachment 4320
Dark Verdant is a very deep, rich color that's constantly going to be 'talking' to you as it moves, whether outside in sunlight or under street lights and night lighting. The super-high gloss reflectivity is also going to make the shape seem alive as it's moving. Magma and Nimbus both have this same effect.
I've never really seen anything quite like this out in the wild, so this will be a new experience. Show cars always look great at expos under multiple halogen lights, but outside is always a different story. Prior to these new technology paints, in the real world paint depth tended to flatten out compared to what you would see inside at an expo, unless you had a very expensive multi-layer paint job. These new paints look multi-layer, and not cheesy or cheap either.
Of the 6 FE paints, Hethel Yellow is probably the least techie paint, and the pictures from the Eletre reveal show the yellow Emira looking great. The few photos of Magma on Emiras in the production facility, which were under probably the worst lighting for showing off a paint color, looked just as rich as DV.
Lotus providing the actual reviewers (we'll see these reviews this month supposedly) with a white Emira so as (as they explained it) to not unduly influence anyone towards any one color (baloney lol), tells me they know they've got something special in these paints, and they're holding these aces 'til the last minute.
I find this all very interesting. A new last of the breed Lotus, with a new paint technology, and a new audio system.
I'm all-in for DV.
That's a really useful analysis and great to see those plan-forms in those light conditions. Like you, I'm even more DV than ever now!The new paints they're using have a much deeper, richer color tone to them than the old paints. I think few if any have spent as much time as I have looking at paint samples, trying to come to grips with these colors. Because of the way they play with light, they're VERY hard to reproduce in a render. I believe the images below are the best momentary examples of how this color is going to look as an overall average. I believe their new configurator has it pretty darned close.
Notice the amount of metal flake that's in this paint, and how quickly it transitions from bright to dark.
Outside shot of the planform:
View attachment 4319
Inside shot of the planform:
View attachment 4318
Lotus configurator; look at the area above the bottom of the door, and compare that to the planforms.
View attachment 4320
Dark Verdant is a very deep, rich color that's constantly going to be 'talking' to you as it moves, whether outside in sunlight or under street lights and night lighting. The super-high gloss reflectivity is also going to make the shape seem alive as it's moving. Magma and Nimbus both have this same effect.
I've never really seen anything quite like this out in the wild, so this will be a new experience. Show cars always look great at expos under multiple halogen lights, but outside is always a different story. Prior to these new technology paints, in the real world paint depth tended to flatten out compared to what you would see inside at an expo, unless you had a very expensive multi-layer paint job. These new paints look multi-layer, and not cheesy or cheap either.
Of the 6 FE paints, Hethel Yellow is probably the least techie paint, and the pictures from the Eletre reveal show the yellow Emira looking great. The few photos of Magma on Emiras in the production facility, which were under probably the worst lighting for showing off a paint color, looked just as rich as DV.
Lotus providing the actual reviewers (we'll see these reviews this month supposedly) with a white Emira so as (as they explained it) to not unduly influence anyone towards any one color (baloney lol), tells me they know they've got something special in these paints, and they're holding these aces 'til the last minute.
I find this all very interesting. A new last of the breed Lotus, with a new paint technology, and a new audio system.
I'm all-in for DV.
The new paints they're using have a much deeper, richer color tone to them than the old paints. I think few if any have spent as much time as I have looking at paint samples, trying to come to grips with these colors. Because of the way they play with light, they're VERY hard to reproduce in a render. I believe the images below are the best momentary examples of how this color is going to look as an overall average. I believe their new configurator has it pretty darned close.
Notice the amount of metal flake that's in this paint, and how quickly it transitions from bright to dark.
Outside shot of the planform:
View attachment 4319
Inside shot of the planform:
View attachment 4318
Lotus configurator; look at the area above the bottom of the door, and compare that to the planforms.
View attachment 4320
Dark Verdant is a very deep, rich color that's constantly going to be 'talking' to you as it moves, whether outside in sunlight or under street lights and night lighting. The super-high gloss reflectivity is also going to make the shape seem alive as it's moving. Magma and Nimbus both have this same effect.
I've never really seen anything quite like this out in the wild, so this will be a new experience. Show cars always look great at expos under multiple halogen lights, but outside is always a different story. Prior to these new technology paints, in the real world paint depth tended to flatten out compared to what you would see inside at an expo, unless you had a very expensive multi-layer paint job. These new paints look multi-layer, and not cheesy or cheap either.