A sparse Hawaiian shirt pattern on a black stock background and blued barrel, not the textured black paint, would be my pick. Bird of Paradise and Red Hibiscus. Calla lily leaves for longer architecture.
I don't tend to fit in, anywhere! No sense in hiding it...
My son has a shirt that is camo, but upon close inspection some of the blobs are dinosaur shapes. You may not want dinos
, but maybe they can get a print film with deer or antler shapes for the branches and blobs of the pattern. Something interesting that not everyone will have.
Hydro dip is a very cool finish. Anything is possible. I have seen Leonardo's Vitruvian Man applied to a target rifle. Turned out very nice, the parchment makes a good desert color. It looks like sand and sticks till someone tells what it is.
As far as actual camouflage goes, the Kryptek patterns are modern, good looking designs that look nice at the range and disappear in the wild. I know I am tired of the same old, three color, smooth blob Viet-camo. Although a Retro Euro-cam might be neat. Cold War Era Danish maybe?
If you know the name of the design, you can google image search it to see if any rifles come up. There will be millions of ideas there.
@LoonWulf, do you have tropical print camouflage on the Island? Or is it the same boring stuff we have in Michigan? Do Hawaiin shirts work for camouflage there? All the fancy patterns the experts dream up look awesome in the magazine pictures, but in my part of Michigan a brown Carrhart work set makes one nearly invisible, warm and I can change the oil in the tractor, too.
Not that I don't envy a Sitka jacket, of course, but I am just too practical. (Cheap.)