Keep it Simple Camo Job
10/2007
About 3 years ago, I got tired of making pretty bows. Don't get
me wrong, I still like them, and I still make them, but most of the
time for my personal bows, I just like camo. Here is a really
simple way to get a nice looking and effective camo job on your bow.
I am starting with the osage selfbow I made for the Bowyer's Journal
Ambush Bow Contest. I initially painted it flat black but that
was too simple. I had to complicate it just a bit. Don't
get carreid away trying to make this too hard. It just plain
isn't.
Here it is, sanded and ready to go.

I am using some flat black spray paint from Krylon for the first
layer. You can go about doing a camo job in a couple different
ways, light first, then overlay some dark or dark first and then
masking off the areas you want to stay that color. I chose the
latter because it's easier to mask off the smaller areas I want to stay
dark. You use a touch more paint doing it this way but it's a
small amount anyway. And paint is pretty cheap. Most of
what we see in the woods is light with dark streaks.

Here it is painted black.
Then some masking tape and a sharp blade to cut the strips.
Again, keep this simple and remember you want more light than
dark. Mask off small strips. Use random sizes and
shapes. I think it looks best to taper the strips but it really
doesn't matter that much. And, this is not the 90's, less is
definitely more. Try to move from the handle to the tip so later
when you pull the tape, you can move from the tip to the handle and
make your life easier.

Then paint it a slightly lighter color. I chose a camo green from
Krylon. It is ultra flat paint and works really well.
Do the masking once again. Cross some of the previously masked
areas and then lay some alongside them. Mix it up and don't have
too much dark in any one area. Again less is more. Planned
randomness is a good idea. Everything you masked before is going
to stay black and everything you mask now will be green (unless it's
black). Got that?
Then spray it with your final, very light, color.
Then peel the tape. Take your time. Don't pull your hard
work off. Try to distinguish between layers, pulling the most
recently added layer off first. It's much cleaner and easier that
way.

Here is the result with a flash and about 10 feet away.

Here it is from 25 feet


Detail shots.
The tape will leave some ridges. Scrape them off gently with your
fingernail. Don't sand it. That might muddy your paint job.
A final coat of matte clear or satin poly after the paint fully cures
and you are ready to go.