Tragically, this diary has now become a memorial to my dear brother Andy. He passed away five days before Christmas in a Hospice here in Plymouth from the throat cancer which, despite the radio therapy, spread quickly to his shoulder and hip. I managed to complete the Bounty before he passed and his son took photos of it to show him. I will always regret that he never had the opportunity to see her completed for himself though. The real heartbreak comes from knowing that his cancer could have been cured – if he had not suffered from Crohn’s Disease since he was fourteen. His tumour could have been removed and replaced with a section of bowel but he’d had so many operations to remove blocked sections of bowel due to the Crohn’s there was none left to
be removed. This is for you Andy, we will meet again one day!
Before starting the next set of sails, it’s worth pointing out a little difference between the old and new! When the Bounty went into ‘hibernation’ she had ten out of her full complement of sixteen sails attached. Following the kit instructions I had used fabric glue (in a tube) to glue the folded hems before Mum then added the stitching on her sewing machine. That was then, this is now! Mum is now ninety six years old and registered blind (although she still has a little peripheral sight left, distorted by age related macular degeneration. She hasn’t used the sewing machine for many years and quite frankly, I haven’t got a clue how the thing works!
On top of that, over the decades that fabric glue has gone brown with age as you can see on the hems of the two sails on the foremast in
Photo 13. The remaining sails therefore were hand stitched in their entirety and instead of the fabric glue of old I used a more modern variety, which comes on a roll and is applied via the heat from an electric iron (I
can manage one of those!)
When it came to making up the rest of the sails I hit a ‘small’ problem – I couldn’t find the flaming things! I was sure I knew exactly where they were, and had been for years – but they weren’t! The sails came in two issues of the kit magazine – sheet A and then sheet B. I naturally assumed that the sails already on came from sheet A so the missing ones must be on sheet B. I managed to find an on-line company selling long gone partwork issues from various firms and lo and behold they had a single issue with the sheet B sails in left, so I grabbed it whilst I could. I then re-read the instructions and only then discovered that the sails already fitted were in fact a mix from both A and B! The main ones I needed were actually from sheet A, namely the main mast sails: Mainsail, Main Topsail and Main Topgallant. It wouldn’t have made any difference however as the sheet A issue had been sold out everywhere for some years now. Fortunately the foresails and the mainsails which I'd bought are not that different, the Main Topsail should be an inch or so taller but not so much that it is glaringly apparent. Fortunately the Mizzen Jib comes on B anyway so the only other job was to create a new lower fore and aft sail from one of the spares as you’ll see later.
When the first sails were made all those years ago, I remember cutting the sails out from the sail cloth sheet and then gluing the hems down before Mum did the sewing part. After that there was a section which
had to be hand stitched, namely the
Bolt Rope. In the real sails this thicker rope was stitched around the sail on its outer edges leaving a loop at each corner and a series of loops around the edge to which the running tackle ropes and blocks were tied on. The actual kit instructions for the sails took a ‘slightly’ more simplified approach to the Bolt Rope and had it laid along the fold line of the hem so that it was enclosed when the hem was glued down, leaving just the loop at each corner sticking out. Couldn’t do that of course
so the Bolt Ropes were hand stitched around the pre-glued edges as you can just make out in that photo. This time around I had a different idea. I bought a tapestry frame, the kind with a dowel at top and bottom linked together by a rectangular section with wing nuts to tighten and loosen the dowels. I already had one of these from my cross stitch adventures though I had to make up one of the connector sides as one was missing (of course)
. This worked really well but was a little wider than I wanted so I bought a smaller version too. The sailcloth with the sails printed on was cut into convenient strips with multiple sails one above the other and the top and bottom edges fixed onto the dowels by double sided tape, (they’re supposed to be sewn onto the stapled fabric on each dowel really but this was less work!) With the dowels rotated to bring the sail in the centre and stretched taut I then sewed the dark lines running down the sails (where the individual rolls of canvas were joined together ) and also the horizontal bars found on the larger sails where the ropes used to tie the sails up in the furled position (called
Reefs) were passed through a reinforced band. These can be seen on the Mainsail in
Photo 14. When those were finished and with the sail still held on the frame I then sewed on the Bolt Rope, twisting the rope into a loop at the corners. I started in the centre of the bottom edge and went right round the sail until the rope joined up at the starting point again. One of the corner loops can be clearly seen in close up in
Photo 16 along with the hand stitching around the Bolt Rope itself. With the Bolt Ropes attached I then cut out the sail from the sheet, carefully folded the hem over and cut a thin strip of the glue web placing it inside the hem before going over the edge with the hot iron. A couple of passes and the glue melted, fixing the hem in position. I suppose the next thirty years will confirm whether the glue on this one will stay clear or go brown like the tube glue! I then had to hand stitch the edge of the hem to tidy that up and to match the first set of sails. Each of these sails took me approximately a week to complete (about two to three hours a day).
The method of attaching the sails to the yardarms in the kit is by means of a series of brass wire rings of various sizes. I did use these on the fore and aft sails between the masts and also on the Mizzen Jib but for the square sails I went for the more accurate method of tying the sail to the yard with short lengths of rope called
Robbands. There should be a lot more of them than I put on, I’ve got three on each side of the yardarm (where the brass rings would have gone) with a fourth attached to the Bolt Rope loop. In actual fact there should be two attached to each of the sailcloth strips making up each sail, that would be twenty four on the mainsail!
Anyway, I inserted the short lengths of thicker thread using the darning needle method and tied them off before securing the knots with a drop of super glue and clipping off the ends neatly. You can just make out one of them over the first vertical line on the right of the sail in
Photo 15.
Moving up the mast, the Main Topsail came next as seen in
Photo 17, it has just been tied off to the yard at both corners and the pre-inserted Robbands can been seen sticking out ready to be tied off over the yardarm. Finally the top most Main Topgallant was made up as illustrated in
Photo 18, fortunately this one doesn’t have those horizontal lines to stitch so he came a little quicker! That photo shows the Topgallant already fitted up with its
Bowlines, however before those were put in there is another piece of the running rigging which has to go on first – the
Buntlines. These are two ropes which are tied to the yard, one on either side and drop down over the front of the sail, pass underneath and then up to a series of blocks on the aft side of the yard before running down to a belaying pin on the deck. I believe they are used when pulling the sail up to the yards for the crewmen to furl and tie it off. The portside one is just visible on the Topgallant running down to where the sail is lifted up at the bottom. The double block for those aforementioned bowlines is tied off on the foremast just above the cross tree as shown arrowed in
Photo 19 and the two ropes then come down to the aft most belaying pin on the midships pin rack attached to the ships rail, also arrowed in the final
Photo 20. In a later instalment I’ll show how the ends of those ropes in the belaying racks were tidied up with some fake rope-ery!
Until next time Happy Modelling to you All!
Robin.
Plymouth57 attached the following image(s):
First wooden ship:
The Grimsby 12 Gun 'Frigate' by Constructo Second:
Bounty DelPrado Part Works Third:
HMS Victory DelPrado Part Works 1/100 scale
Diorama of the Battle of the Brandywine from the American Revolutionary War Diorama of the Battle of New Falkland (unfinished sci-fi), Great War Centenary Diorama of the Messines Ridge Assault
Index for the Victory diary is on page 1