Chrysler 1967 Touch Up Paint

1967 Chrysler Touch Up Paint (35 OEM Colors)

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For small chips & scratches

Customized Color Paint Pen

Repair tiny chips and scratches with precision. Perfect for small nicks from rocks or door dings, the fine tip applicator makes it easy for beginners to achieve a clean, factory-quality finish.

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For Medium-sized Chips & Scratches

Customized Color Paint Bottle

Tackle medium-sized scratches and chips with our Customzied Color Paint Bottle. The built-in applicator brush provides smooth, controlled coverage, while the included basecoat delivers a perfect factory match in your custom paint color.

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For larger areas & panel resprays

Customized Color Spray Can

Cover larger areas with a smooth, professional finish using ourcustomized color Spray Can. Designed for hoods, fenders, and larger scratches, this product provides consistent spray coverage and factory-matched color accuracy.

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For large repairs & total resprays

Customized Color Professional Size Paint

When your repair job calls for more than a touch-up, step up to our professional-size automotive paints. Available in Pint, Quart, or Gallon sizes, these paints are ready-to-spray using an airless spray gun.

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For small chips & scratches

Customized Color Tricoat Paint Pens

Repair tiny chips and scratches with precision. Perfect for small nicks from rocks or door dings, the fine tip applicator makes it easy for beginners to achieve a clean, factory-quality finish. Each order includes a basecoat and a midcoat pen.

Shop Now

For Medium-sized Chips & Scratches

Customized Color Tricoat Paint Bottles

Tackle medium-sized scratches and chips with our Customzied Color Paint Bottles. The built-in applicator brush provides smooth, controlled coverage, while the basecoat & midcoat deliver a perfect factory match in your custom paint color.

Shop Now

For larger areas & panel resprays

Customized Color Tricoat Spray Cans

Cover larger areas with a smooth, professional finish using our customized color basecoat & midcoat Spray Cans. Designed for hoods, fenders, and larger scratches, this product provides consistent spray coverage and factory-matched color accuracy.

Shop Now

For large repairs & total resprays

Customized Color Tricoat Professional Size Paint

When your repair job calls for more than a touch-up, step up to our professional-size automotive paints. Available in Pint, Quart, or Gallon sizes, these paints are ready-to-spray using an airless spray gun. Each order includes a basecoat & a midcoat paint.

Shop Now

How to Find Your 1967 Chrysler's Color Code

Chrysler paint codes can be difficult to find. In the good old days, they were on top of the radiator support, often hidden under engine grease and oil. Later models put them on the drivers door jamb. Typical format: BS/GBS, but only BS is the color code; it can also appear as QBS, PBS, TBS, etc., with the first letter as a confusing "Year Code." BS corresponds to Deep Water Blue Pearl Clearcoat; the G in GBS is not part of the color code.

More about Chrysler color codes

1967 Chrysler Background Info

The 1967 Chrysler Vibe

1967 was the year Chrysler decided that if you were going to drive a land yacht, you were going to do it in high definition. Between the top-tier Imperial and the rest of the lineup, our database tracks a massive 35-color palette. This wasn't just a choice; it was an era of decadence where a man could choose between Turbine Bronze Poly-a nod to Chrysler's jet-engine experiments-or the deep, brooding Plum Red Poly. These cars had more sheet metal than most modern parking lots, and the paint was laid on thick enough to survive a minor fender-bender without showing a scratch. It was the peak of the "Poly" era, where metallic flakes were added to the mix to make sure those massive fins and slabs of chrome caught every bit of the afternoon sun.

Paint Health Check

We are firmly in the Single Stage Era here. In '67, Chrysler used "Lustre-Bond" acrylic enamel. Unlike the thin, layered stuff they use today, this paint has the pigment and the protection mixed into one heavy-duty slab. The legend says it's bulletproof, but the reality is that it's prone to "The Chalky Ghost." Because there's no clear coat to shield the pigment, the sun eventually cooks the oils out of the surface. If your Aegean Blue Poly or Forest Green Poly looks like it's been dusted with flour, that's Oxidation. The paint isn't necessarily gone, but it is dying of thirst. If you let that chalky fade go too far, the moisture gets into the pores and starts the slow crawl of rust under the edges.

Restoration Tip

The golden rule for 1967 enamel: It needs wax or it dies. If you're touching up a chip in Silver Mist Poly or Flame Red, you can't just slap paint over oxidation. You have to "climb through" the dead paint first. Use a dedicated paint cleaner or a light rubbing compound to remove that chalky layer until you see the true, vibrant color underneath. Once you've performed your repair, seal the entire panel with a high-quality carnauba wax or a modern sealant. Without that barrier, the single-stage enamel is essentially "open" to the elements, and it will start fading the second you pull it out of the garage. Keep it fed, keep it waxed, and that deep '60s glow will stay put.

Chrysler Models Released in 1967

What kind of Chrysler are you repairing? We'll help you find the right color.

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We're always expanding our catalog! If you can't find your vehicle, please let us know and we'll do our best to find the color you need.