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Posted

Another practical reason for colour coding the boats may have been to ensure all the associated various parts for each boat were kept together. Thwarts, masts and oars would have been unshipped from stored boats on deck, especially when nested.

Often I wonder where the heaps of temporary kit must have been stored when needed close by. Not all of it could have been put down into the hold. There must have been a lot of organised clutter that never gets depicted on models.

Posted (edited)

You could follow the scheme as presently on Victory ,or was the last time I was in Portsmouth

Barge_(Trimmed).jpg.86c866dda3d0bfc63d6d0a7b36a73300.jpg

 

1468546658_vICTORYbARGE2005.jpg.4d786f9fa605790225c71d83523ae80b.jpg

 

IMG_2205.JPG.c2f89dd63447faaf508acfcbfe3efc04.JPG

 

The Barge has a green trim , I understand green was an expensive colour, so perhaps fitting for an Admirals Barge

1315494852_Pinnace_(Trimmed)1.jpg.30b46afac10cca5672bce6ef5e33ff7f.jpg

The Pinnace

100_1584.jpg.e699e1e579b5a7915a1f244f94bcc58d.jpg

The Launch

dscf0015.jpg.2efb1d42b174931491d61903a3a3df4e.jpg

The Cutter

659121617_003(2).thumb.JPG.3d0ea5811bb5dcefdfda3e9973b14860.JPG

I used the scheme on my Victory build, although I did  trim the Pinnace Blue rather than black and yellow.

 

B.E.

 

 

 

 

Edited by Blue Ensign

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