Building the Ships

The most frequent question I hear is, where did you get the ships?? Well, I built them. I ended up with a quite efficient process where I would do hull shaping, painting etc. in batches, and would spend about 20-30 minutes total per ship. Which compares favorably with the time needed to paint a 1:1200 miniature, but the real advantage is cost. I built a total of 120 ships, enough of each type and nationality to play all the scenarios from the AH edition of Wooden Ships & Iron Men (and therefore easily enough to play all Close Action scenarios). The total cost (over all ships) was about $15-20.

Hulls

The hulls were cut from balsa wood strips (the sort you get from modeller's stores). 74 hulls had a 3x5mm cross section, 3-deckers were higher, frigates lower (2mm high), larger classes were correspondingly larger (I think 98/100/110 were 6mm wide, the 120s and the Santissima Trinidad were custom jobs). I did exaggerate the size difference a bit for easy recognition. After cutting, the bow and stern were sanded into shape. I glued a 1mm thick poop into place on the stern. Next step, painting the top in the national color (I simply followed the WSIM scheme). I also printed ID numbers (again using the WSIM pattern, 8pt font I believe) on colored paper, cut the numbers out, and glued to the poop. So each ship has a unique ID without having a base. Last, affixing the sides. The gunports are not drawn individually. Instead I drew them large scale for each class (a 74's gunport pattern would fit in a 3x20cm rectangle - don't remember the proportions exactly) and then photocopied them, reducing in size, and doubling at each stage. So for the price of 10 copied sheets I had 16 copies. British patterns simply were copied onto yellow paper. The Spanish ships were colored dark brown with a felt tip pen. The ship-sized gun patterns were then simply cut out and glued to the sides of the ship with paper glue. I never got around to doing any elaborate stern embellishments, so the sterns just stayed natural wood. I applied some transparent (matt) varnish to keep fingerprints from dirtying the model over time.

Rigging

The masts are brass wire (the sort you get in modeller's stores), thickness somewhere in the 0.5-1mm range (I forget what exactly it was). They are quite sturdy (if you step on a ship the thing most endangered is your foot). Sails are simple trapeze-shaped, cut from paper. Draw the pattern on a sheet, and cut out 20 sails in a few minutes. I drew the yardarms in with a ball pen, and added a bit of shading with pencil. Masts and sails came in five sizes, with the mainmast of each vessel typically one size larger than the others. So, if the largest mast is an A and the smallest an E, a 100/110/120 rated ship would have mast pattern BAB. (For easy visual recognition, the 80s got a two-decker hull with the dimensions of a 100, and ABA rigging.) 'F' are frigates.
Ship class - rigging

Santissima Trinidad - AAA
100/110/120/80,98 - BAB
74,90 - CBC
64,50,50F,44F - DCD
44,38F,32F - EDE
To assemble, the sails were glued to the masts with your generic glue (I used Uhu); they don't have to take much strain. Gluesticks are too weak however. Bore the holes into the ship, and stick the masts in (typically by exerting a bit of pressure on the top of the mast with a piece of board so the mast doesn't stick in your hand; no hammering should be necessary). The bowsprits are quartered toothpicks (lengthwise - it's easy to do with a sharp knife).

Markers

Full sail markers are sails one size larger, with a strip added at the top (for folding). Put on scotchtape to stiffen and make durable. Fold the top, clip a hole into it with a belt hole clipper or similar tool. The "fire" markers got a flame pattern, the "struck" markers I simply covered in black, and the "captured" markers are in paper of the color of the other side.
Last modified 29.5.2003