Yes I was thinking a grey maybe white is too bright in the Sun?
As we know its always Sunny in the Lovely UK.
Avoid all dark colors. For deck and topsides.
Light grey.
Even consider mixing with some white to make it even lighter.
Light grey.
Even consider mixing with some white to make it even lighter.
So here's a question: How easy is it to do that with any consistency?
I'm quite pleased with the (very light grey) colour of my decks but they're sorely in need of a repaint and the International and Hempel light greys aren't as light. Mixing in white would be the obvious answer but I'm a bit concerned about getting the same proportions each time I decant a bit into the tray.
How do people find the practicalities of mixing paint like this or in practice is a 60/40 mix not that much visually different given an uneven surface to 40/60.
[*EDIT: I don't need the new colour to be an exact match for the old, but I would like the new colour to be consistent across the deck]
Maybe look at the colours available in Sandtex and other textured masonry paints ...... trouble then may be the large pack sizes ... but you can always do half the house to use it up
Which brand paint are those colours from?
I'd say lightish grey (e.g. Goose Wing grey in that range), both in general and to complement your red sails. (Watch out, as some greys are surprisingly blueish - hard to judge on a small sample.) Avoid green and red (the red will jar with the different colour red of your sails, and in the very unlikely event it really was the same red as the sails, it would all be too much anyway). Personally I don't like blue deck paint.