As an aid on painting BARTON's camo since these limited distant images don't show areas like the bridge, 5-in gun mounts, and stack looking at fore and aft sides. BARTON was painted at Boston Navy Yard in her Ms 12R(mod) pattern replacing the pattern the builder had painted her to. Each of the Navy Yards seems to have adapted a "similar" Ms 12R(mod) pattern "style" that they painted destroyers (NO two Ms 12R(mod) patterns were so exact or common, resulting that NO two destroyers would have exactly the same pattern). Boston started applying the same style of camo on destroyers starting roughly in the February-March 1942 time period right up to August 1942 when they started applying either Ms 18 or Ms 22.
There weren't that many of the BENSON-GLEAVES destroyers painted at Boston that made it to the Pacific while still in Ms 12R(mod). However, there were many of the BENSON-GLEAVES class units in the Atlantic Fleet that were, particularly the original units (DD-421 through DD-444). The four most well known units to serve in the Pacific are the four units in DesDiv 22 (DD-433 through DD-436) that came to the Pacific with USS HORNET (CV-8). There are a great series of photos of USS GRAYSON (DD-435) taken in June 1942 at MINY showing her "Boston Style" pattern. Looking through Navsource for photos will turn up examples of destroyers painted in this Boston "style" of pattern.
Here are examples of the Boston style pattern on USS EDISON (DD-439) (applied early in 1942), USS COWIE (DD-632) (painted at the same time as BARTON), and USS GRAYSON (DD-435). Plus a couple of units that were painted by Federal and/or NYNY (New York started to paint close to the Boston style by the sumner of 1942, besides painting several different experimental styles) and served in the Pacific, USS LARDNER (DD-487) and DD-486 LANSDOWNE (DD-486). Hopefully these images will give you an idea of how they carried over the patterns around the stacks and the bridge areas. Boston was actually kind of sparing on painting patterns on the superstructures, stacks, and mounts when compared to New York.