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re: Anybody ever camo painted their duck boat or flat boat?

Posted on 4/8/15 at 5:30 pm to
Posted by indytiger
baton rouge/indy
Member since Oct 2004
9849 posts
Posted on 4/8/15 at 5:30 pm to
So let me see if I understand this right...

Take a piece of bamboo, hold it up vertically and at various slight angles, and spray paint up it with say black and light brown?


ETA: BTW, everybody's posted looks good. I'm really hoping to not jack mine up. Still looks ten times better than it did with just the green coat.
This post was edited on 4/8/15 at 5:37 pm
Posted by kook
Berrytown
Member since Sep 2013
1904 posts
Posted on 4/9/15 at 7:44 am to
Use the leafy top of the bamboo. Not just the stem
Posted by jbgleason
Bailed out of BTR to God's Country
Member since Mar 2012
18928 posts
Posted on 4/9/15 at 9:41 am to
If you are wanting effective Camo and not just to look cool then use little to no black. That color doesn't appear much in nature. Look up newer Camo in use by military and note the colors used. Browns and greens mostly.
Posted by Bleeding purple
Athens, Texas
Member since Sep 2007
25315 posts
Posted on 4/9/15 at 10:31 am to
quote:

So let me see if I understand this right... Take a piece of bamboo, hold it up vertically and at various slight angles, and spray paint up it with say black and light brown?



Generally you will want flat natural colors. If you are spraying do the following but if you are using brush on paint then paint the actual stencil and stamp the wet paint covered vegetation on a previously randomly camo painted background.


With spray paint and real life stencils you are effectively painting the shadows behind the grass or leaves you want to represent.

Pick the color you want the grass stems/leaves to be. Spray an area that color. Or better yet use two slightly different colors of tan, or light yellow, or green in a random pattern. let this dry.


Then get a wad of what ever grass, bamboo, leaf pattern you want on the boat. fan it out so it loosely covers the area you just painted. Now use a darker spray than before and over spray the fanned out leaves while keeping them as still as possible. Try to only spray perpendicular to the surface of the boat so the paint does not go under the leaves. In some areas spray it a little darker an in others a little lighter. For a more realistic look you can then move the fanned out leaves VERY slightly (only 1-5 mm and lightly spray again with the shadow color. This will add natural shadowing and highlights giving the leaves or blades of grass more depth of appearance.


For even more added realism you can then add some very fine splattering of black, brown, purple, red, or bright yellow based on the colors your target vegetation turns as it decays. Think about all the little specks of color on the blades of grass when you are searching for blood droplets tracking a deer.






As for the suggestion to not use black. When spraying on paint the underlying color shows through with light layers of spray and thus black is really darkly tinting the underlying color until it get thick enough to actually look totally black. Black also provides the best contrast with lighter colors and thus produces more depth or 3d like appearance to the pattern when used correctly.
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