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Paint colours

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Jul 12, 2023
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I am continuing my scratch build of the Packet Ship Seagull. Please could someone give me some guidance as to paint colours and what is painted. I completed HMS Terror that was essentially black hull externally with white, all weathered. I am intrigued where the other colours are identified.
 
I take it that your packet ship is the English version of that name, Packet as in a packet of mail?
On the west side of the Atlantic in the 1830's and 1840's a packet was the heavy carrier. They had their own hull form.
Three masts, minimal deadrise, a hard turn, and a slab side. Optimized for carrying capacity and efficiency. The point being that they probably used the lowest cost paint that could get the job done. Lamp black and white chalk may have been the low cost pigments. Maybe rust came in second.
If your packets were also a most with the least situation, I would guess that the paint choices would have been similar. If the routes were mostly cool or cold climates black would probably help with heat gain. If the routes were tropical, I wonder if white would help reduce the oven effect? I did a sail ferry at the North Carolina Outer Banks in August. I discovered one thing: there ain't no shade on a sail boat.
If you want your ship's captain/owner to have an imagination, you could experiment with a mixture of rust and black - a dark red.
Here is hoping that a bit of controversy gets you help from those with hard data. Otherwise, as long as you limit your choices to pigments that were available and in general use, whatever you chose would be as probable as can be expected.
 
B lack above the water line was predominant and dark red copper oxide paint which would slough off was standard below the waterline to help keep off the barnacles. Many had a white stripe and black gun ports, even if they carried no guns, to hopefully intimidate the bad guys.
Blackball Lines Montezuma‘, by John Hughes
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... dark red copper oxide paint which would slough off was standard below the waterline to help keep off the barnacles.

Depending upon the date... It gets tricky around then. The first practical copper-based antifouling paints were developed around 1860 and antifouling paint first began to be commercially manufactured in 1863. Before then, I believe most all wooden hulls of any size were coppered.
 
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