How do Graffiti Yellow and classic TV Yellow compare?

I would say they are quite different, TV yellow is fairly pale found on LP Juniors and dull and graffiti yellow is quite vibrant.
 
Google images you will find a number to compare. I don't think TV Yellow is close to a Warmoth colour offering.
 
Not even in the same ballpark.
  • Graffiti Yellow, as the name suggests, is an opaque, vibrate hi-viz yellow, almost florescent or daylong.
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  • TV Yellow, like Butterscotch Blonde, wasn't a real finish, but the side-effect of age on a white finish. There are at least a dozen different finishes Gibson calls TV yellow, with various degrees of transparency.
Real "TV yellow" was a "limed" finish. In the '50s, ash and birch were popular furniture finishes, and to furniture manufacturers used liming to make dark woods like Mahogany appear as light wood. The wood is white-washed first, then grain filled with a grain filler to bring forward the grain. They only turned yellow because the clear coat would yellow with age.

This is what a Les Paul Special would have looked like new in the '50s.
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The Custom Shop creates TV Yellow by starting with the above and then spraying a yellow-tinted clear coat. The production models just get a yellow color coat of varying degrees of thickness. It's the same with Fender, the CS creates Butterscotch Blonde by spraying a white blonde, then yellow clear coat, where-as the production models like the AVRI just get a transparent yellow color coat.
 
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