Notice: Undefined offset: 8192 in /home/storm/sites/modelboatbuilder-co-uk/public/gallery/include/debugger.inc.php on line 112

Notice: Undefined offset: 8192 in /home/storm/sites/modelboatbuilder-co-uk/public/gallery/include/debugger.inc.php on line 112
Model Boat Builder Gallery - Display Models

Model Boat Builder Gallery

Display, Working and Pre-Owned Models.


Home Login
Album list Last uploads Last comments Most viewed Top rated My Favourites Search
Home > Display Models

TITLE  +   - 
FILE NAME  +   - 
DATE  +   - 
POSITION  +   - 
achillesm.jpg
ACHILLES908 viewsThis lovely little display piece is a model of a fast New York schooner, circa 1835.
barge2.jpg
SYLVIA663 viewsThese coastal trading barges used to feed London. I have an old photograph of the Pool of London, absolutely full of them. The riverside warehouses which are now fashionable apartments used to be the city's granary.
The Thames Barge was an astonishingly efficient sailing craft. They had a capacity of up to about a hundred and eighty tons. The crew consisted of a man, a boy and a dog. It was said the dog's job was to bite the boy if he didn't move fast enough. With their shallow draft and leeboards, they could sail in waters where few other craft could venture.
There is a very pleasant pub at Snape, in Suffolk, called the "Plough and Sail", a name which neatly encapsulates the essence of the Suffolk agricultural economy until the advent of the large articulated lorry. It is well inland, up a narrow channel. The barges would work up it to the warehouse. The Snape channel was known to bargemen as one of the most difficult. Then they would load up with corn, slip down-channel, and sail through the narrow channels, or swatchways, that threaded between the many sandbanks of the Thames estuary, going where no other commercial craft would dare to go. If the channel had shifted and they ran aground, their massive timbers and immensely strong construction would save them until the tide rose again. Then it would be up the London River to discharge.
This model, the "Sylvia", was built for a descendant of the Shrubsall family, who were one of the most famous families of barge builders. He now lives in the U.S.A., and his model occupies an honoured place in his house.
(model by John Davies)
bounty1.jpg
HMS Bounty616 viewsH.M.S. "Bounty" will forever be associated with the famous mutiny. There is still controversy over whether Bligh was an unusually brutal captain, or was simply cursed with a bad crew. It is certain he was a superb navigator.
"Bounty" was a typical small merchant ship of her era, used as a transport ship by the Admiralty. This lovely model faithfully represents the original. In the detail shot, you can see that some parts of the upper deck have been cut away, allowing you to view the lower deck, which is fitted out in detail. At 30" l.o.a., this lovely model is large enough to be properly admired, without being unduly demanding of display space.
(model by Frank Hasted)
bounty2.jpg
HMS Bounty (detail)628 viewsDetail of Frank Hasted's model of HMS Bounty, with deck cut away to show interior detail.
bountywreck1.jpg
Bounty (wreck)653 viewsFrank Hasted admits it took all his skill to rescue this very rough "Bounty" hull which a client brought to him, but our before-and-after pictures show that even the worst part-built project can be brought to a successful conclusion.
(Original butchery by unknown builder, model rescued by Frank Hasted)
bountywreck2.jpg
Bounty (wreck... saved!)723 viewsYou'd never believe this fine model was rescued from the horrible bundle of sticks in the previous picture!
Complete_Deck_Detail_View.jpg
Small Colin Archer; deck detail693 viewsEven on a small display model, we try to get the detail right. It's surprising how many models show the sails hoisted and the lines coming down to a pin rail or cleat and cut off there. Imagine you're on the real boat. You go to lower a sail. You cast off the rope; the end vanishes up the mast...... that's why pin rails, as here, have the bights of the ropes coiled down and hanging from them.
(Model by John Davies)
Complete_Port_Bow_View.jpg
Small Colin Archer, Port Bow view.668 viewsBuilt to a tight deadline for a wedding present, she makes a pretty picture.
(Model by John Davies)
Complete_Port_Quarter_View.jpg
Small Colin Archer; Port Quarter view.636 viewsBuilt to a tight deadline for a wedding present, she makes a pretty picture.
(Model by John Davies)
coureur2.jpg
Coureur (stern detail)590 viewsWhile the Royal Navy was supreme in fleet actions in the Napoleonic War, they were still caused considerable grief by the French chasse-maree luggers. Fast, agile and heavily crewed, they would dash out from Biscayan ports to snap up any unwary British merchantmen which wandered within reach. "Le Coureur" is a fine example of the type. This beautiful model illustrates the exquisite craftsmanship which goes into all our scale replicas.
(model by Gordon Williams)
coureur3.jpg
Coureur (under construction)600 views
coureur5.jpg
Coureur (bow detail)589 views
77 files on 7 page(s) 1