Colour matching is the process of preparing a repair compound that precisely replicates the colour of the surface being repaired. It is the single most important skill in surface repair and the primary factor that determines whether a repair is visible or invisible.
Why Colour Matching Is Difficult
Surface colours are never truly uniform. Natural stone varies between slabs. Acrylic baths age and yellow. Tiles fade with UV exposure. Laminate patterns vary between manufacturing runs. Matching a repair to an aged surface in a specific location, under specific lighting conditions, requires experience and a comprehensive colour library.
How Professional Colour Matching Works
Base selection — the technician selects the closest pre-mixed base compound from their colour library. For standard materials (white baths, grey quartz, natural granite), a close match is usually available.
Pigment adjustment — the base is adjusted using a range of pigments to move the colour closer to the exact target. This is the skilled part — knowing which pigments to add and in what quantity comes from experience.
Test application — a small test patch is applied and allowed to cure. The colour of repair compounds changes slightly as they cure, so the cure test is essential.
Gloss matching — the finish of the repair is polished to match the gloss level of the surrounding surface.
Why Some Repairs Are Better Than Others
The difference between a visible and invisible repair is almost always colour matching quality. A repair that is slightly the wrong shade or the wrong gloss level stands out. A precisely matched repair disappears.
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