M45
Well-known member
I like it also.I think the word everyone is looking for is patina, not flatness.
pa·ti·na
pəˈtēnə/
noun
noun: patina; plural noun: patinas
a green or brown film on the surface of bronze or similar metals, produced by oxidation over a long period.
a gloss or sheen on wooden furniture produced by age and polishing. (google definition)
Full Definition of patina (webster's online dictionary)
plural patinas play \-nəz\ or patinae play \-ˌnē, -ˌnī\
1
a : a usually green film formed naturally on copper and bronze by long exposure or artificially (as by acids) and often valued aesthetically for its color b : a surface appearance of something grown beautiful especially with age or use
2
: an appearance or aura that is derived from association, habit, or established character
3
: a superficial covering or exterior
In helmet collecting, I have taken patina to mean the worn areas on a helmet, especially to the top of the crown that is worn down to smooth paint (re: from factory/reissue texture) and/or to a smooth old rusted steel. Formed by repetitive field/combat use. Another example might be the photo of a kubelwagon in North Africa that had the paint worn off of the top of the driver's door where it had been touched repeatedly. That bare steel forms layers of oxidation (what I call 'black rust). It does not get a chance to form a thick red rust because the object is being used repeatedly.
Flatness and deadness to me refers to the body of paint; its depth, its richness. New paint has more depth, body and richness than does paint that has oxidized for decades (I'm talking about flat paints, not glossy ones). I was trying to point this out with the three Normandy Camos above.