Thai monsoon starts late May. A trophy that looks flawless this week can fog, spot, and tarnish by August. Pick the finish like you live in Thailand — because the recipient does.
Thai monsoon starts late May. A trophy that looks flawless this week can fog, spot, and tarnish by August. Pick the finish like you live in Thailand — because the recipient does.
For metal trophies, a two-part automotive-grade polyurethane top-coat seals out humidity for 8-10 years even in non-air-conditioned display cases. Single-part lacquers (the cheaper default) fail at the 18-month mark with milky bloom along polished edges. The upcharge per trophy is ~฿40 — pennies versus the cost of re-finishing.
Bare polished brass looks gorgeous on delivery, but Thai air will green-spot it within four months. If the brief calls for a brass aesthetic, specify lacquered brass or PVD-coated brass (which holds up for 15+ years). The visual difference is negligible; the longevity difference is enormous.