The royal yacht Caroline (circa 1749). Assembling the kit from Panart. Part 1.
MODEL BOATS #523 Sep 1994 (v.44) pg. 36
The royal yacht Caroline (circa 1749). Part 2.
MODEL BOATS #524 Oct 1994 (v.44) pg. 51
The royal yacht Caroline (circa 1749). Part 3.
MODEL BOATS #525 Nov 1994 (v.44) pg. 38
Sloop 1776. Scratch built model (1:48 scale) includes every element of naval sailing ship construction without being too ambitious. Full-size plans must be ordered.
MODEL BOATS #545 Jul 1996 (v.46) pg. viii (Insert)
Tip on using black plastic cable ties to simulate a ratchet wheel on models of 1800s top sail schooners.
MODEL BOATS #552 Feb 1997 (v.47) pg. 24
Kitty. An easy-build Thames sailing barge for R/C in 1:40 scale. Full-size plan included.
MODEL BOATS #581 Apr 29 1999 (v.49) pg. 40, Insert
Added Info MODEL BOATS #583 Jun 24 1999 (v.49) pg. 9
Scratch building the hermaphrodite brig Viola. Part 1.
MODEL BOATS #587 Oct 1999 (v.49) pg. 34
Scratch building the hermaphrodite brig Viola. Part 2.
MODEL BOATS #588 Nov 1999 (v.49) pg. 32
Rotor sailing ship.
POPULAR MECHANICS Aug 1963 (v.120#2) pg. 125
Model sailboat, an "aerohydrofoil". Sailboat with a tall dorsal fin that skims over the surface on foil legs.
POPULAR MECHANICS Aug 1966 (v.126#2) pg. 165
How a master modeler creates scale model replicas of ancient sailing ships, working from original drawings.
POPULAR MECHANICS Sep 1974 (v.142#3) pg. 70
Polliwog model sailing skiff.
POPULAR WOODWORKING #92 Sep 1996 (v.16#4) pg. 24
The Schooner AMERICA. How to build her half model.
WOODENBOAT #54 Sep-Oct 1983 pg. 67
Bolger "Cartopper". Part 1. An 11.5-ft. skiff designed by Phil Bolger features tack-and-tape construction and three power options (sprit rig sail, leg-o'-mutton sail, or oars). Constructed mostly of plywood. Instructions given for both a model and the full-size boat.
WOODENBOAT #85 Nov-Dec 1988 pg. 36
Bolger "Cartopper". Part 2. Building of the model continued.
WOODENBOAT #86 Jan-Feb 1989 pg. 29
Permanently shape ship sails and flags by applying a coating of shellac and alcohol or glue and water.
WORKBENCH Jan-Feb 1964 (v.20#1) pg. 62