Has anyone seen a 67 B Body painted this color or close to it?
You and I have similar tastes my friend! I came across that photo on an ebay ad last year and I copied and pasted it on this site when I was researching paint codes for my '68. It's the most beautiful blue paint job I've seen on a '68-'69 B-body. When I emailed the owner of the car you posted when he had the ebay ad up, he told me that it was a repaint in original '68 B5 blue. Now that opens it up to 3 choices actually.
Read elsewhere on this website and you'll see that this has been discussed ad nauseam, but here's the summary - since I just went through it myself:
You can verify these codes by googling chrylser paint codes and they will have jpegs of color code sheets listed. Look at the one for Plymouth, as the codes for Dodge and Chrysler are different letter/number designations.
'68 B5 Blue is actually coded as QQ1 Blue. There is no "B5 Blue" for '68, but QQ1 is generally referred to as '68 B5 Blue.
'69 B5 blue is lighter and less electric than QQ1 Blue.
(As far as I know, 1970 B5 blue is the same as '69 B5 blue)
'71 B5 blue saw yet another shade change, with the blue getting slightly darker, but more than that - it's got less of a turquoise or green tinge to it. It's more of a "true blue".
Some people will say, "don't be so picky, just paint it any B5 blue and call it done!" Well, I had my paint guy shoot all 3 for me on test strips with a coat of clear to compare. Man, when you look at those 3 side by side, they definitely look different.
Bear in mind what others have told me and what I've seen firsthand - lighting when viewed in person (inside a garage vs outside in direct sun vs overcast, as well as viewing in person vs viewing online on the computer) can exhibit DRASTIC differences in tone and shade. For example, one of the members here (68x426) has a beautiful orange roadrunner that I've seen in person, but in the photos he took and posted on this site the car appears as the most beautiful red you've ever seen.
For the car you posted, it's difficult to tell without seeing the car in person, but I would guess if it looks as it does in the photo, that when he had it repainted, he may have told the painter "I want 68 B5 blue" and if he didn't explain to the painter that there were 3 different B5 blues ('68, '69, & '71) then he likely got the most recent one for that era of mopars, which was the '71 B5 blue. By the way, the '71 B5 blue is what I've chosen to paint my '68 and it's at the body/paint shop as we speak.
As others have said, even with the correct color and shade chosen, differences can result from the painter who actually shoots the paint on the car. Nozzle pressures, other settings, and the brand of paint used, as well as whether the car is clear coated or not, can all affect the final outcome. I'm not a painter, just telling you what I've learned over the last year.