The "patina" comment really bothered me. If a car has undergone an excellent restoration to original condition, then it should win a prize. Full stop. The standard should be as they were when the rolled off the production line. When shopping for a new car, I don't believe I look for a patina, and I don't believe that the nice folks at Standard Triumph sought to add a patina to the cars when they were new.
Now, all that said, we should all be honest with ourselves. When our cars were new, they were manufactured largely hand-built by companies that were constantly out of funds and were a few short years away from being nationalized. Indeed, in my conversations with John MacCartney last weekend, he said straight out that the technology they were using in the 1960s was already decades old and outdated and they did so because they simply couldn't afford anything else.
My point is that most contemporary restorations will, by their nature, result in a car that is somewhat better than when the cars were new. Panel fit on 1960s British roadsters was notoriously bad. Most of us obsess about gaps in a way that nobody grabbing press-fit panels on a production line would ever care about or have the time to concern themselves with. The pictures I have of my parents in and around their new 1960 Austin Healey 3000 clearly show this, and my father -- who was a restorer then as he is now -- recalls this very clearly. Panel fit was lousy.
Plus, these cars were painted on a production line. They weren't treated to even the basic care that we would all expect from a normal paint job for a car we're redoing. It gets painted. We sand, we compound, we buff, we repaint. We let the paint cure and shrink for weeks, and we do it all over again. I can assure you there wasn't a large volume manufacturer at the time here or in the UK that did that. Think about what we usually do to a wood dash. I'm not talking about a replacement dash. Just what we all usually do when we pull out the original, sand the old finish off of it, and then re-coat it. I doubt any of us would be satisfied with what it looked like when new. We'll make it just a bit shinier.
Plus, none of us, including concours judges, would probably be satisfied with a car that was actually in like-new condition. My Lotus Elise came with so many minor defects from new -- not even addressing the mechanical stuff -- that I doubt will be added or reproduced when these cars are restored in four decades' time. Adhesive oozing from the bottom of the plastic sills where they are bonded over the fiberglass shell. Ill-fitting interior panels. A passenger door that didn't line up well with the latch. I can't wait to tell a concours judge in that time (if I'm still alive): "I swear, it was oozing that black glue the day I bought it! I spent months searching for original spec Hethel ooze!"
None of this is in any way intended to be criticism. It's just the nature of taking something old and spiffing it up, even if we're going for originality. In the end, you usually end up with something that is just a bit prettier than when it was new, especially since we're working on one car that we love and adore, and the nice folks at Triumph (or BMC, Rootes, Jaguar, Lotus, etc.) were cranking them out in larger numbers.
Just my two cents.