Wooden Ship-Building

Wooden Ship-Building
Author: Charles Desmond
Publisher: Vestal Press
Total Pages: 227
Release: 1997-01-01
Genre: Transportation
ISBN: 1461694272

First published in 1919, this reprint helps you relive the glory days of sailing.

Wooden Ship

Wooden Ship
Author: Peter H. Spectre
Publisher: Weidenfeld & Nicolson
Total Pages: 272
Release: 1995
Genre: Naval architecture
ISBN: 9780304344895

Wooden Ship Building and the Interpretation of Shipwrecks

Wooden Ship Building and the Interpretation of Shipwrecks
Author: John Richard Steffy
Publisher: Texas A&M University Press
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2012
Genre: Shipbuilding
ISBN: 9781603445207

This comprehensive volume details the complex art of wooden shipbuilding in ancient and early modern times. The text includes discussion of ancient, medieval, and post-medieval shipwrecks, which represent a cross section of technology as seen through a select group of archaeological finds.

How to Build a Wooden Boat

How to Build a Wooden Boat
Author: David C. McIntosh
Publisher: WoodenBoat Books
Total Pages: 276
Release: 1988-03
Genre: Sports & Recreation
ISBN: 9780937822104

David C. "Bud" McIntosh was a designer, builder, and sailor of large and small wooden cruising boats for more than 50 years, and wrote about it for over 10 of those years. He made his home on New Hampshire's Piscataqua River, where he was teacher and friend to both amateur and professional boatbuilders.

Wooden Shipbuilding

Wooden Shipbuilding
Author: W. J. Thompson
Publisher: BoD – Books on Demand
Total Pages: 214
Release: 2011-06
Genre: History
ISBN: 3861959283

Reprint of the famous original (first issued in 1918).

Japanese Wooden Boatbuilding

Japanese Wooden Boatbuilding
Author: Douglas Brooks
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2021-09
Genre:
ISBN: 9781953225009

This is the story of the author's apprenticeships with Japanese masters to build five unique and endangered traditional boats. It is part ethnography, part instruction, and part the personal story of a wooden boatbuilder fueled by a passion to preserve a craft tradition on the brink of extinction. Over the course of 17 trips to Japan, Douglas Brooks traveled over 30,000 miles to seek out and interview Japan's elderly master boatbuilders; he built boats with five of them, all in their seventies and eighties, between 1996 and 2010. For most of them, Brooks was their sole and last apprentice. Part I introduces significant aspects of traditional Japanese boatbuilding: design, workshop and tools, wood and materials, joinery and fastenings, propulsion, ceremonies, and the apprenticeship system. Part II details each of his five apprenticeships, concluding with a poignant chapter on Japan's sole remaining traditional shipwright. This fascinating book fills a large and long-standing gap in the literature on Japanese crafts, and will be of interest to boatbuilders, woodworkers, and all those impressed with the marvels of Japanese design and workmanship.

Boatbuilding

Boatbuilding
Author: Howard Irving Chapelle
Publisher: W. W. Norton
Total Pages: 632
Release: 1941
Genre: Science
ISBN:

This book serves as a workshop handbook; giving detailed instructions on how to go about each part of a job building a boat and its proper sequence, as well as what must be looked forward to, while performing a given operation. The advantages and disadvantages of each type of construction suitable for amateurs will be described.

Wooden Ship

Wooden Ship
Author: Jan Adkins
Publisher: WoodenBoat Books
Total Pages: 58
Release: 2004
Genre: Juvenile Fiction
ISBN: 9780937822852

Originally published: Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1978.

Wooden Warship Construction

Wooden Warship Construction
Author: Brian Lavery
Publisher: Seaforth Publishing
Total Pages: 241
Release: 2017-04-30
Genre: Crafts & Hobbies
ISBN: 1473894824

“A wonderful book detailing the construction of the Royal Navy’s sailing warships” from the maritime historian and author of Nelson’s Navy (Pirates and Privateers). The National Maritime Museum in Greenwich houses the largest collection of scale ship models in the world, many of which are official, contemporary artifacts made by the craftsmen of the navy or the shipbuilders themselves, and ranging from the mid-seventeenth century to the present day. As such they represent a three-dimensional archive of unique importance and authority. Treated as historical evidence, they offer more detail than even the best plans, and demonstrate exactly what the ships looked like in a way that even the finest marine painter could not achieve. This book takes a selection of the best models to both describe and demonstrate the development of warship construction in all its complexity from the beginning of the 18th century to the end of wooden shipbuilding. For this purpose, it reproduces a large number of model photos, all in full color, and including many close-up and detail views. These are captioned in depth, but many are also annotated to focus attention on interesting or unusual features, which can be shown far more clearly than described. Although pictorial in emphasis, the book weaves the pictures into an authoritative text, producing an unusual and attractive form of technical history. “This book includes plentiful visual representations of actual ships in model form and the accompanying graphics make for wonderful reading . . . I cannot express enough how enjoyable this book is to read.”—Spotter Up “A high-quality book which is recommended to all ship historians and modellers.”—Military Modelling

How to Build Glued-lapstrake Wooden Boats

How to Build Glued-lapstrake Wooden Boats
Author: John Brooks
Publisher: WoodenBoat Books
Total Pages: 296
Release: 2004
Genre: Sports & Recreation
ISBN: 9780937822586

As a child, John Brooks loved to build models and sail with his grandfather. When most teenagers were at the prom, John was changing jibs in the Indian Ocean, halfway through a 35,000-mile, two-year cruise. He began building boats in commercial yards at 19, while studying boat design and building his own boats. John worked for many years honing his craftsmanship on fine yachts, small boats, custom furniture, and a harpsichord. He has been a instructor at the WoodenBoat School in Maine since the mid-1990s, teaching glued-lapstrake boatbuilding, fine interior joinery, and carving. Ruth Ann Hill grew up on the coast of Maine. A writer, boatbuilding assistant, naturalist, and graphic artist, Ruth is the author of Discovering Old Bar Harbor and Acadia National Park: An Unconventional Guide and a contributing editor for Maine Boats & Harbors magazine. John and Ruth started their business, Brooks Boats, in 1991. They design and build glued-lapstrake boats in West Brooklin, Maine-and get out to enjoy their handiwork in its proper element whenever they can.