Great advice JC. My original intention was to do a minimal clear stain above the waterline and a medium dark brown stain below the waterline. Kind of like the lighter example in the hull sample pictures. But now that we're talking about the grain I am seeing that this might be a paint job instead of a stain job.
Looking at the grain along the facing / starboard edges (see pics) it looks fairly open grained along most of the lifts, perhaps too open grained to show off the wood. This may be a paint situation after all because the grain seems too open to be a realistic depiction of the hull.
Other problems are that lift 4 has a tighter grain than lifts 1 through 7, so I may need to replace lift 4 to match the grain pattern of the other lifts. Not a problem if we paint.
Second problem is that I discovered a knot on lift 6 that was repaired in the board, but after planing you can see where the knot was repaired along the starboard edge. I will need to replace lift 6 in addition to lift 4. Again, not a problem if we paint.
And if we try and do black matte paint for the top lifts, I can fabricate a maquette in black matte and teal to match up with the 2 backdrop candidates.
To be honest, my biggest concern at this juncture is to execute and show off the tumblehome that consists of lifts 5, 6, 7, and 8 (the top 5 lifts). If I had to guess, I'd say that paint would show off the tumblehome better than stain, which may distract by showing the open grain on the starboard face.
Also, if I did this build in poplar, as I planned at the beginning, I would definitely do a ligjt stain because poplar has virtually no grain.
Here are some pics of the grain patterns. The lifts go 1 through 7 top to bottom and lift 8 (the topmost lift) is not attached yet.
What do you suggest based on this open wood grain? Paint instead of stain?
I do like pictures of the real Shadow that show her with a black hull above the waterline. That was her color scheme during her 17 year racing career. And sea foam green is one of my favorite colors when I built La Esmeralda the windjammer a couple of builds ago.
If I paint her black, I may also do the waterline and some accent lines like a gold sheer line and some bow decorations or filigree with gold paint markers.
Thanks for pointing me in the right direction. Appreciate your helpful perspective.
EDIT: Adding new maquettes with black on top and sea foam green on the bottom. Sea foam green often represents anti-fouling compounds that protected hulls from worms and rot. Will also do a maquette later in black matte paint,
