Description
Matte Chrome Blue sits in a category of its own. It carries the full depth and color saturation of chrome but skips the blinding mirror finish, giving your car a cooler, more composed look that turns heads without screaming for attention. Under direct light the blue shifts and swirls with a metallic dimension you simply cannot get from standard gloss metallic paint or a flat color vinyl.
The film is a polymeric PVC vinyl with a genuine matte chrome finish layer, backed by a solvent-based acrylic air-release adhesive that lets you reposition panels during install and get bubbles out easily. It works with both dry and wet application methods, so whether you are a seasoned installer or a first-timer taking on a single panel, the film cooperates.
Key features
- Matte chrome finish: deep blue-chrome saturation with a soft, non-reflective surface, calmer than mirror chrome and far more dimensional than standard gloss metallic
- Polymeric PVC face film: engineered for conformability over complex curves, bumpers, and door panels without tearing or lifting at edges
- Air-release adhesive: solvent-based acrylic adhesive lets you slide the film into position and push bubbles out during install without trapping them permanently
- Dry or wet install: compatible with both application methods so you can choose the technique that suits your skill level and working conditions
- Wide temperature range: rated from -30 C to +140 C, so the film stays stable through cold winters, hot parking lots, and everything in between
- PET plastic release liner: a firm liner that keeps the film flat and crease-free right up to the moment you apply it

Specifications
| Material | Polymeric PVC vinyl |
| Finish | Matte chrome (Matte Chrome Blue) |
| Face film thickness | 3.7 to 4.1mil |
| PVC face film | 90 micron |
| Adhesive | Henkel solvent-based acrylic, air-release |
| Adhesive thickness | 1.6mil |
| Release liner | PET plastic, 75 micron |
| Heat resistance | -30 to +140°C |
| Application | Dry or wet install |
New to wrapping?
If this is your first wrap, our guide on how to wrap a car covers the prep, heat-gun technique, and edge-tucking that chrome finishes need. Chrome vinyl is less forgiving than matte, so professional install is the safest route for a full-car job.














