Thanks Alan for looking in and commenting.
jWood Grain
The wood grain was done with some base techniques that I have both read and googled on youtube.
Essentially, after I primed the entire interior in semi-gloss blk, I let it sit for a few days (not by choice, i was very busy).
Next, I hand painted on a base of MM enamel "Burnt Sienna" on just the panels I wanted to wood grain. I let that sit for a bit to set up.
Next was a layer of MM Acryl 4697 Tan. While still wet, drag a toothpick through it in whatever wood grain pattern you like. This established the texture and grain lines.
Lastly, it was drying a little light, so I thinned out some of the burnt sienna as a wash, and used a very fine tip brush to add some darker tint over the existing lines and tone down the tan a bit.
That's it!!!
FUZZY CARPET FLOOR:
I can NOT take credit for this at all. About a year and a half (maybe 2), I started reading FSM and AutoScale on my visits to the local B&N way before my return to modeling. In the 2012 AutoScale - Build Better Muscle Cars edition, there was an article by Clay Kemp featuring his build of the 1968 Dodge Charger R/T. I would like to build that one some day. To say the least, it's an inspiring build and I thank Clay for that.
Props to Mr. Kemp for such a beautiful build and a great article. He did a wood grain in his car too, but I didn't exactly follow that to the letter, but it's the same basic idea. Back to the carpet.
His technique is so simple it is pure genius.
A white glue (Elmer's mixed with water) brushed on the area you want to carpet.
Pour black embossing powder (I used "ebony" found at any craft store) over the glued areas. Make sure it is evenly coated, and then I poured out the excess. I had already done all the detail painting including the floor mats, so be extra careful to not get the glue mixture anywhere you don't want carpeting!!!! I got a little on the door chrome trim, and it came right off with a toothpick.
I found this at my local Michaels for a few $s. It's worth it as it will do a LOT of cars in the future.
It is a very FINE powder. All the stuff that didn't stick went right back into the bottle.
Any way, that is it. Thanks for asking Alan, I really enjoyed sharing this little gem to make the detail pop!