Bootlipkiller wrote: all the mallards I killed today had boners do to my epic calling.
thierracing wrote:SO my buddy and I are start to build a duck boat and we're to the point of painting. the boat is a green fiber glass now but we're thinking a brown base coat then covering that off with an olive green. My main question is what have you guys used for stencils or things along the lines of that. We hunt in cattails mainly. So reeds are going to be what we want in our design? anyone have any pics or stencils they could share? or advice? Not sure how I feel about just using reel reeds to pant the outline of. Want it to look nice.
Oh also, off topic, but should we use 1/2 or 3/4 EMT conduit for the blind?
Thanks, Matt
assateague wrote:thierracing wrote:SO my buddy and I are start to build a duck boat and we're to the point of painting. the boat is a green fiber glass now but we're thinking a brown base coat then covering that off with an olive green. My main question is what have you guys used for stencils or things along the lines of that. We hunt in cattails mainly. So reeds are going to be what we want in our design? anyone have any pics or stencils they could share? or advice? Not sure how I feel about just using reel reeds to pant the outline of. Want it to look nice.
Oh also, off topic, but should we use 1/2 or 3/4 EMT conduit for the blind?
Thanks, Matt
Don't use brown for a base coat, use tan. Then grab handfuls of whatever, I used hacks of baling twine, twigs from a maple tree, some crepe myrtle branches, and I think some old dead cattails. Then lightly overspray them with the greens and browns. LIGHTLY. And mix it up some. Then you're pretty much done. You can slap some handpainted reeds on if you want, but it's probably not necessary. But use tan for the base coat, and leave plenty of it showing. Please. Otherwise, it will be a big dark blob from more than 20 feet away.
NuffDaddy wrote:Cardboard cut out stencils. I've never used them on a boat, but that how we do our deer blinds.
And use 3/4. Half is too flimsy unless your building a really little blind.
thierracing wrote:assateague wrote:thierracing wrote:SO my buddy and I are start to build a duck boat and we're to the point of painting. the boat is a green fiber glass now but we're thinking a brown base coat then covering that off with an olive green. My main question is what have you guys used for stencils or things along the lines of that. We hunt in cattails mainly. So reeds are going to be what we want in our design? anyone have any pics or stencils they could share? or advice? Not sure how I feel about just using reel reeds to pant the outline of. Want it to look nice.
Oh also, off topic, but should we use 1/2 or 3/4 EMT conduit for the blind?
Thanks, Matt
Don't use brown for a base coat, use tan. Then grab handfuls of whatever, I used hacks of baling twine, twigs from a maple tree, some crepe myrtle branches, and I think some old dead cattails. Then lightly overspray them with the greens and browns. LIGHTLY. And mix it up some. Then you're pretty much done. You can slap some handpainted reeds on if you want, but it's probably not necessary. But use tan for the base coat, and leave plenty of it showing. Please. Otherwise, it will be a big dark blob from more than 20 feet away.
Thanks for the info! The boat is green now, should we just paint the tan right over top of the green fiberglass or will we have to do other base coats before the tan to get the right color?
thierracing wrote:What about painting an olive green for a base then going over with reed cut out stencils for the tan to spray the reeds on top? Will that work? that was our original plan, but curious as to what you guys would do. I just want to do what works best.
Olly wrote: We're still the bastard pirates of the duck forum world.
Tomkat wrote:AT and Nuff are on track.
On this one, I grabbed some weeds and sprayed krylon at will.
assateague wrote:In my opinion, stencils make a pattern which is too dense. I've never liked the stencil thing. Looks good on the trailer, but when backed into the reeds, looks like a big dark blob. I used tan as a base, and only covered it lightly and sparingly. By all means, do whatever you want and what you think looks good. This is just my opinion.
Olly wrote:Always do your lightest colors first if a dark scale is what you want and dark colors first if you want a light scale. Camo 101.
NuffDaddy wrote:Olly wrote:Always do your lightest colors first if a dark scale is what you want and dark colors first if you want a light scale. Camo 101.
Opposite of what I've found.
aunt betty wrote:Went to the dark side of the force. Timber hunters are like Darth Vader.
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