Silver Still Shines As Top Car Color

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Silver Still Shines As Top Car Color (NAPSA)—Motorists have no need to brush up on their color choices. For the sixth year in a row, silver shone at the top of the list of colors chosen by buyers of new cars and light trucks sold in North America. The 2005 DuPont Automotive Color Popularity Report cited the continued, but waning, lead of silver in the 53rd compilation of consumercolor preferences. Silver Still At The Top Of The Charts Though more dominant in years past, silver accounted for 18 Red makes outstanding vehicles like this Porsche Cayenne Tita- nium stand out in the predomi- nantly silver SUV crowd. percent of all car and light truck sales in North America, 25 percent of sales in South America, 29 percentof all sales in Europe, and a whopping 30 percentofall sales in Asia. “The mind thinks of silver as a remained among the top three in South America and Asia. Manufacturers Occasionally Get It Right Some manufacturers, such as Porsche, have hit the color-palette jackpot on certain models. The ning color expert Leatrice Eiseman. “Silver glistens, glimmers and sparkles. There’s just something about the appeal of opulence.” Several Colors Strengthen; Gray Makes Substantive Gains While silver still leads the color pack, the advantage over other hues has faded in favor of chro- black and blue—fourof the top six colors listed by DuPont. “Being a limited edition, the precious metal, such as gold, but more attainable,” said award-win- matic shades such as blue, red and light-metallic brown, as well as medium-darkgray. All of this is combining to put silver’s lead under pressure from several colors, all mere percentage points behind theleader. “Gray is branching out of its silver base,” said Karen Surcina, color marketing and technology manager for DuPont Automotive Systems. Black, now often seen with metallic effects, such as flakes or chips of mica or aluminum, also strengthened as the second-most popular color in Europe and limited-edition Porsche Cayenne S Titanium comes in silver, red, Porsche Cayenne S Titanium comes only in a few colors,” said David Pryor, Manager, Market Research and Product Planning. “That is for two major reasons— one, the car is a stylistic statement and two, we keep the selections to a desirable minimum because we can only produce a small number of Titaniums.” The Porsche Cayenne Tita- nium, like most limited-edition Porsches, promisesto be a soughtafter collectable, regardless of color choice. Color Is Critical Part Of Purchase Decision The auto market is further pushing the envelope in color, recognizing that as many as 40 percent of consumers are likely to switch brands if they can’t get the color they want.