Steve_S said:
TCs did not come in Ivory. They came in the following colors:
Regency Red
Sequoia Cream
Shires Green
Clipper Blue
Black
Sequoaa Cream however was sometimes called Ivory, so perhaps that's where the confusion lies.
Found your reference for those colors, Steve...<span style="text-decoration: underline">T Series Restoration Guide</span> by Malcolm Green.
& here's my earlier quote:
tony barnhill said:
Page 71 of <span style="text-decoration: underline">MG T Series in Detail</span> by Paddy Willmar says "The very early TCs came in Black - shades of Henry Ford though obviously caused by postwar supply difficulties - but colours later available included MG Red, Regency Red, Shires Green, Almond Green, Ivory and Clipper Blue."
Think, as I said earlier, we're all saying the same thing differently depending on which author we read....Green calls the TC color Sequoia Cream & the TD color Ivory; Willmar calls the TC color Ivory and the TD color Ivory (page 98: <span style="font-style: italic">"Paint options offered on the TD were initially the same colours as the TC has been produced in, namely Red, Green, Ivory, Blue or Black...Early in 1951 two new colours were added, Autumn Red and Sun Bronze...This continued more or less through the production of the TD, except that by 1953 the colour choices had been narrowed down to MG Red with Red trim, Woodlands Green with Green trim, Ivory with Red or Green trim, Silver Streak Grey with Red trim or Black with Red or Green trim."</span>).
On
https://www.mgcars.org.uk/mgtd/mgtd_finishes.htm he calls the TD color Ivory.
However, the paint code for Sequoia Cream is YL5 (I know that because of the research we did on the paint for mine)...the same as Ivory (YL5).
The same with old original lacquer paint chips/codes (I've got access to all the old lacquer codes from 1948 until 1976): the old original lacquer code for Ivory in 1948 was U7054 & the old original lacquer code for Ivory in 1953 was U7054. It was used on both Austin Healeys & MGs in 1948 & 1953 & neither year's listing of original lacquer colors mentions Sequoia Cream.
No telling who originally called it Sequoia Cream but the earliest place I found it in writing, like I said earlier, was in the later complete listing of MG paint colors after British Leyland homolgated all the paint codes/names (that might also be where Malcolm Green also found it!).
This has been a fun exercise & I think I might've learned something about MG paint codes & the discrepancies in them!