I really want to work on the American frigates but its quite daunting because I'm pretty new and there aren't many other sb sailing ships to steal parts from. maybe I'll start something next time I'm off and rowdy36 can post on it every day telling me stuff I'm missing or that isn't the right scale now that hes a professional Napoleonic drawer
Darth Panda did the Constitution some time ago, or at least had a WIP somewhere. You might want to talk to him to make sure he's not already completed it, or if he's still reserved it. However, somewhere about I've got PDF images of Howard Chapelle's line drawings of various USN ships.
I also drew
Confederacy in Sailbucket scale (twice Shipbucket scale).
Just checking on my drawings, I've got:
- The original 74-gun
America gifted to the French (
hull and sailplan)
- Frigate
Confederacy (
hull and sailplan)
- a number of boats from Benedict Arnold's Lake Champlain fleet (
Loyal Convert,
Cutter Lee,
gundalow Philadelphia,
galley Washington)
- USS
President class (
waterline up) + builder's
draught)
-
Constellation/Congress (builder's
draught)
-
Skjoldebrand (builder's
draught and
sailplan, ship built for tribute to Algiers)
- 1799 USN Galley (
drawing)
- USS
Essex (
sailplan and basic hull +
draught)
- 1799 Ship-of-the-line (
draught; proposed but not built)
- Periagua-rigged gunboat (
drawing)
- USS
Oneida (
spar and sailplan + hull)
- USS
Columbia/Java/Guerriere (
draught; updated
President-class)
- USS
Franklin (
draught)
- USS
Columbus (
draught)
- USS
Ohio (
draught)
- USS
North Carolina/Delaware (
draught)
-
Brandywine-class frigate (
draught)
- USS
Hudson (
draught)
- USS
Pennsylvania (
draught)
- USS
Independence (as razee:
draught)
- USS
Congress (1844;
draught)
- USS
Albany (sloop-of-war,
draught)
- USS
St. Mary's (sloop-of-war,
draught)
Most of the draughts are scans of two-page spreads, so there's an unfortunate crease down the middle. All of the draughts also show
only the hull, nothing above the deck level in terms of masts, spars, or rigging. Most of the sailplans, by contrast, do not put much detail on the hull.
If you're at all interested in sailing vessels, I *highly* suggest Howard Chapelle's
The History of the American Sailing Navy: Their Ships and Their Development. All of the drawings above are scans from that book. Think of it as Friedmans for sailing ships. I only scanned a dozen of the drawings that intrigued me the most - there are probably a hundred or so I didn't scan out of the book.