are clear plastic with paint on them. The base part is "clear"
with various colors attached. So, you need 3 parts. Paint is not a color variation
only plastic is.
are clear plastic with paint on them. The base part is "clear"
with various colors attached. So, you need 3 parts. Paint is not a color variation
only plastic is.
I didn't know about this distinction but it results to strange situation
as this one.
What if the whole part is painted? would its color still be the one underneath?
I don't recall if there is any such case.
why this distinction between color and paint is made or why is it necessary?
are clear plastic with paint on them. The base part is "clear"
with various colors attached. So, you need 3 parts. Paint is not a color variation
only plastic is.
I didn't know about this distinction but it results to strange situation
as this one.
What if the whole part is painted? would its color still be the one underneath?
That doesn't happen except for chromed or drum-lacquered colors, and we do
not use the color of the plastic underneath to classify them.
I don't recall if there is any such case.
why this distinction between color and paint is made or why is it necessary?
Different prints get different entries, and molded parts only get one entry if
there is only one color changing. These are the catalog standards.