One of the first things that caught my eye, in both the
Constitution weathering, and the photo of
Surprise, was the running rust. I spent some of my early years in the Navy, as a deckhand in a Sumner class DD. I remember the constant fight with running rust. Anyone who doesn't believe that water can "remove paint", should watch a power wash in operation. The Boatswain....that's Bosun to those who know better....tried to insure that the ship never had more than one primer coat, and two finish coats. That usually meant stripping (chipping) all the paint off, wire brushing/sanding all the rust, priming, and applying a finish coat. the second finish coat, was a "quick clean up", so we'd
look good. I can't remember now what a complete coat of paint weighed, only that it was a lot more pounds than I'd want to try to lose on "nutrisystem" !!!!! Painting "over the side" , underway, was rarely done, so runnin' rust, and dried salt were constant elements of the ship's appearance. I saved the photo of
Surprise, I'll refer to it later when I decide how much hull weathering I will use. The
Constitution photo is another good one to save, very nicely done, slightly heavy, but decidedly not overdone.