Hi, Roger. By speaking to Jim, I assume you respond to me? If this is the case, here are my thoughts on your post.
Your post is actually making two separate points: First, you speak as a Naval architect (professionally trained in hull design), so from your perspective, it’s striking that any checklist of “quality” would omit hull-line accuracy. To someone with that background, the fairness of lines and fidelity to the original vessel are foundational. That’s a technical definition of quality. But then you pivot...
You remind us that the original question was about value to someone else, which often means the market value, what someone is willing to pay.

And market value is frequently detached from technical excellence. It’s influenced by context, perception, decor trends, the buyer’s motivations, and even status signaling. Your example of the aristocrat buying books by the linear foot illustrates that objects are sometimes purchased as visual props, not for their intrinsic merit.
And the “banana taped to the wall (BTW my favorite)” is almost certainly a reference to Comedian by Maurizio Cattelan - a conceptual artwork that sold for a staggering price. Technically simple. Conceptually provocative. Market value? Enormous. Craftsmanship? Not the point.
Your argument isn’t dismissing craftsmanship. It’s separating: Technical quality (accuracy, lines, execution) and Market value (what someone is willing to pay). Those two sometimes. but not always. overlap each other.
In fact, your post indirectly reinforces my concern: when we talk about “value to others,” we must clarify whether we mean aesthetic appreciation, emotional meaning, educational worth, or financial price. Because once money enters the room, hull lines may matter less than interior design trends.
