Does that mean i have to make a current regulator for each and every led?
Every LED has to have a current limiter, yes. You can put several LED's in series though and use one current limiter.
IE- Say you run 14.4V when the car's running, and your LED's require 3.1V, then 4 of those = 4 * 3.1 == 12.4V < 14.4V. And let's say they're rated at 20ma. Then you build a current limiter that limits current to say, something slightly less than 20ma. Say 19.2 or 18.8, etc. Whatever it comes out to be.
You'll lose some amount of voltage against the regulator though, I forget how much though. So really you might could only do 3 in series else they may begin to dim before you hit 12.4V theoretically. Been a while since I played with LEDs. The regulators I built before were just a LM3705 IIRC. It's a voltage regulator, with a resistor hooked between the base and something so that it limits current but voltage can vary. That way your LED's can be setup to run at full brightness, and they never dim. With resistors, you have to run a large enough resistor to limit current at the highest expected voltage. IE-you'll spec them for 16-18V because if you spec them to 12 or 13 and your car charges to 14.4 or 15.1, etc, it will fry them.