Finally a comment on the camo! I actually spent almost as much time on it as I did the boat! It was my first time to try and camo anything, so I wanted to go all out.
That pattern is a homemade/copy of a pattern. I painted the whole rig the dull green, then I had a pattern I "borrowed" from Mossy Oak Shadow Grass (I copied a sample from a website, blew it up, printed it out, then laminated/cut it out) This is the far background
I then used acrylic paint from the craft store to paint the dark twigs going diagonally with a small brush. I felt right up there with Leanardo Da Vinci! This is the ?middle ground?
I then drew my own grass stencil and used it for the foreground. (I drew it on an 8 x 12 sheet, then laminated and cut it out)
The three layers gave a really good 3-D effect. I used 2 shades of green, 2 shades of beige (all spray paint, one can of each got the whole boat done), a dark brown/black (licorice actually) acrylic paint and a light brown acrylic paint.
Here's a close up of the camo. I wasn't paying attention when I took the photo, but this is a spot that I had to touch up. I taped and painted the railing before I put the clear coat on...so some of the camo peeled up with the tape. Probably one of the worst spots on the boat really.
I tried a couple of different combinations...i think the key was to even break up the camo patterns themselves with different colors. I painted the whole back light green, then the background stencil with dark green. Before moving the stencil, I spritzed on some of the beige and some of the light green. I then tried to paint the twigs as sharply as I could with the small brush to really stand out. Then came the grass stencil...a gold/dark beige went on as the base, and the dark green and light beige were used to spritz on.
I just didn't want it to look cheesy like some of the stuff you see! Like deer stands that you might NOT have seen had it NOT been for the camo! =)