MIKE-
Zolatone is great stuff! Very hard and durable! Not cheap, though!
It's a mixture of two different paints that won't mix or blend, like water and oil won't mix, or are not solvent in each other.
They pour equal amounts of each in a pressure pot for spraying. Then stir them. They then look marbelized. If you've ever tried to mix an oil based enamel with a lacquer, you'd have gotten the same looking result. More stirring equals a finer mixture and particles. The pressure pot then is used to deliver the mixed paint to the spray gun thence to the surface sprayed. Looks splattered and multi-colored.
I think the formulation of Zolatone has changed because of environmental laws. Most all their finishes now are fine splattered two colored. On my older '87 CD-22 CRuiser, the pattern is slung in long blue filaments over a predominately white background. I don't see that type of pattern available in todays selection of Zolatone paints.
Cleaning up the spray gun, hoses, and pressure pot used to be a very difficult job because of the two different solvents required to cut the different paints involved. It may be simpler now. It's the volatile solvents released in spraying that the environmental regulations are trying to eiminate.
Sorry for the long speel!
Joe. :teeth