I understand the trepidation toward new stickers from the comments here, and I am also fearful of slippery slope consequences. I'd like to reinforce what I said on the podcast however - we conduct restorations for people who still have their original childhood toys and have asked us to clean them up for sentimental reasons.
We do not charge for our time and labor because part of the benefit for us is making a video documenting a particular vehicle. Sometimes the owner buys the parts, sometimes we assist in tracking them down.
We also follow a strict policy of only restoring as far as the owner asks us to go, and we make it clear up front - "If the vintage stickers are salvageable/serviceable, they will be preserved/re-used." RetroBlasting has *never* obliterated stickers that could be saved. Regarding the now-famous "Juan Snowspeeder," those decals were absolute toast. As were the bits of decals on the severely broken wings of Matt's X-Wing fighter.
As a classic car guy, I'm overjoyed to see it when a classic sports car is brought back from the brink of a junkyard destiny. I look at vintage Star Wars like classic Ford Mustangs - there are thankfully many original survivors and "barn finds" with the original stickers and no yellowing, etc. And yet there are many in bad condition that could still be saved as "classic drivers" - maybe too far gone to ever be museum worthy - but not so far gone they should be treated like trash. The snowspeeder and X-Wing we restored fall into that category - immensely important to the people who sent them to us and deserving of a redeemed glory.
With our recent B-Wing restoration, we stayed far away from the original stickers because they were in very good shape. Attempts to salvage the rear engine sticker to allow for cockpit disassembling did not pan out, so one sticker was carefully matched and replaced. Again - for a childhood owner of the toy - and a close friend.
I recognize that it's an idealistic point of view - that there are people who are happy to deceive buyers. RetroBlasting doesn't sell reproduction or restored toys. We're not a store. Any toys we do sell are duplicates from our collection that are meticulously described. At most the toys sold have been dusted/gently cleaned.
I've read the extreme argument that any vehicle with lost stickers should just be left blank. My question is: Who does that protect? No one wants to display blank vehicles, so they'll just get traded around over and over until someone puts new stickers on them to make it look more presentable. Or, a childhood owner is shamed by the collecting community for wanting his original TIE Fighter to have wing stickers again and used some exact paper reproductions to achieve that look he/she remembers from those halcyon days. So I can only conclude that the "leave vehicles blank" argument mainly protects those who have a fleet of vehicles with all original pristine stickers and they're trying to protect their investment/bragging rights/etc.
Investment protection I can understand, but honestly with the sheer number of Star Wars vehicles and toys made from 1978-1985, a loose complete vehicle from 1978-1984 will *never* be worth any marked amount (A-Wing, Skiff and sandcrawler excepted) compared to the relatively large number of MISB examples that also still exist. So from where I'm standing, with 33 years of vintage Star Wars collecting experience and counting, the "sticker risk" to value of "all original" is minimal to zero.
Now, does that mean I don't care about vintage original stickers? Absolutely not - I care very much and pursue nice examples where ever possible, paying a premium for all original examples, but I also care a lot for vintage Star Wars toys in general. I like seeing them at their best, and saved from the dustbin. So I recognize I have a foot in two camps.
Lastly, as for Retr0brite, we have an equally strict policy. We don't trust it - we use it *very* sparingly, and *only on request.* Jon was adamant he wanted the B-Wing cockpit de-yellowed. Matt wanted to find out if it was possible to blunt the yellowing effect on his X-Wing. In both cases, we were *very* conservative with the application. Matt's X-Wing still has a patina of yellow that shows its age, as does the B-Wing cockpit rotation housing. Melinda and I cut the formula out of pure distrust.
Sorry for the long post. I'm passionate about vintage Star Wars. Hope all this was a valuable insight into our methodology. - Michael