The Inspector wrote:
And, at least one modellers forum is having fits and hair pulling, clothes rending anguish because the 'color, application, tint, shading, is wrong. 'That looks like French chestnut brown' 'that looks like Italian green' 'is that RLM002 interior black on the tail?' All this from a handful of pictures of the completed paint job taken in the California sunshine or fuzzy WW2 photos taken in theatre. One even decries 'no evidence of panel shading or panel lines can be seen'. Lets see now, it's a freshly completely overhauled, freshly painted real airplane, not a model headed for a table @ the IPMS show. There wouldn't be any 'panel lines or shading' on a clean, fresh paint job.
Several claim the colors aren't 'right' and speculate the paint applied by the Luftwaffe (or not) nearly 70 years ago in Russia came from experimental German supplies, French factories, local Russian supplies, or a Pratt and Lambert store in Oshkosh, WI. or who knows. I agree that there are some very knowledgeable individuals on the discussion, including folks who are recognized as knowing their markings and German paints and this one will strongly divide factions for ever, as for me, I'm just going to show up @ KPAE and relish the sights and sounds.
Knowing the level of accuracy that is demanded by FHC (and we have a few forum members with intimate knowledge of that policy) coupled with Mr. Allens ability to get his hands on any sort of electronic analyzer equipment you'd care to dream up, I'll bet the paint, colors, application, and finish are as dead on the money as you can get and I seriously doubt, as one submitter speculated 'someone painted the airplane after it crashed'.

As the originator of that thread and a student of Luftwaffe aircraft, pilots, colors and operations for well over 30 years, I will say this for your benefit: the colors *as displayed in the photo of the finished product* bear little resemblance to anything I've ever seen in any of the hundreds of books I own or tens of thousands of photos I've seen, so you'll forgive my rather substantial doubt as to how accurate the paint colors are on the restoration. Perhaps some amazing level of spectral analysis has brought forth this result, and all of us who've spent so long digging into the Luftwaffe will have a new set of benchmarks to work from... or maybe someone made a guess based on their interpretation of the remaining colors, and this is what we got. It wouldn't be the first time a museum demanded absolute accuracy and did not quite receive it; witness the F3F-2 at the Naval Aviation Museum finished in grey, or the Fw 190D-13 in Mr. Allen's own collection (which spawned an entirely different conversation in that thread).
Whatever the case, and whatever the origin of the original paints used on the aircraft operationally, as I stated in my posts the mere fact that we have a genuine German Fw 190 airworthy is cause for celebration.
Lynn Ritger
Author, SAM Datafiles 9 and 10, The Modellers Guide to the Messerschmitt Bf 109 (part 1 and 2)