Vol. 64, No. 4 winter 2019 314
8.
me it is possible to make blocks of 1/32-inch square boxwood stock but they are not dependable. Slightly heavier stock works better and can be counted on to the USS Constitution Museum Ship Model Guild, though I do not pretend all were in agreement with my ideas.
T e other issue had to do with choices for scale. T ere is always a temptation to push the practical limits of a scale and create a small model in much the same way as a larger one is made. Miniaturists can overcome many of the limitations of traditional ship modeling materials by replacing them with wire, but a ship model that eventually must travel down a bottle neck cannot benefi t much from this option. Shrouds and backstays must fold down and be drawn back up to a convincing tautness. Braces, sheets, tacks and stays must move through rigging blocks, eyebolts, holes in the deck and hull sides for the whole business to work.
T e reality of what will work and what will not is most prominent in rigging blocks. Experience has taught
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