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definately go with a white or beige
one thing I noticed after the return from the tropics is that my very expensive linear polyurethane {sprayed on professionally} blue paint job was all blistered on one side.also spend the 30 bucks at wal-mart and get a black and decker hand held grinder.you will use this for many other projects on the boat and rigging too.my own preference now,is to roll or brush plain ole'marine enamil.its easier to work with and repair---and it hurts alot less whenya' hit the dock. yes,in time it will happen.
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"There are only two colors to paint a boat--black and white, and only a fool would paint a boat black"
Nathaniel Herreshoff
Now, I have to disagree with Cap'n Nat. A dark colored hull on a classic boat looks striking. But, its harder to achieve and maintain a nice finish.
Getting back to the project, I'd probably approach it like this:
Take off the metal rubrails
Clean the area with a degreaser like Formula 409
Wipe with acetone
Sand out the loose bits (save the largest paint chips) bevel the edges
Get the dust out, wipe with acetone
Mix filler thoroughly
Trowel it in using narrow and wide plastic scrapers
Wait a day and sand, sand the corner by hand
Reapply as needed
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black and white----------
I dare anyone out there to give any boat a "dazzle" type camouflage paint job---the kind they gave to warships in ww2
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