After a long wait for stock to return, I was lucky enough to receive the Vanguard Models HM Cutter Sherbourne 1763 kit as a birthday gift today. As this will be my very first wooden ship model, I’m both excited and slightly apprihensive in equal measure!
This is my very first wooden ship build. While I am completely new to the hobby, I have a deep interest in the technical side of building, a preference for self-reliance when it comes to troubleshooting, and a massive fascination with maritime history.
I’ve spent quite a bit of time researching the Sherbourne, following build logs on both Ships of Scale and other forums, and I’ve been genuinely inspired by the incredible standard of work produced by many members here. Some of the builds are absolutely stunning.
Rather than simply producing another standard build log, I’d like to try and make mine genuinely useful — especially from the perspective of a complete beginner who wants to approach the build carefully, thoughtfully, and with as much research as possible.
Before I begin the log properly, I wanted to ask the community:
What would YOU like to see from a first-time builder’s "Sherbourne log" that might make it worthwhile, interesting, or a little different from others already out there?
Some ideas I’ve been considering include:
- honest beginner mistakes and how I corrected them
- planking process and tapering decisions
- paint and colour scheme research (including historically inspired choices)
- tool setup and workspace organisation
- rigging organisation methods for newcomers
- dry fitting and alignment checks before committing to glue
- explanations of things that experienced builders may take for granted
- lessons learned at each stage
- documenting areas where the manual may confuse a beginner
- historical side notes about the real cutter and Royal Navy practices
I’m under no illusion, and this will NOT be a master-class build — but I’d like it to become an honest and well-documented learning journey that may help other newcomers considering their first wooden ship model.
I want to make sure I'm contributing something engaging to the forum rather than just adding noise. What elements do you feel are often missing or glossed over in standard build logs that a new builder could highlight? I’d love to hear your thoughts and suggestions before I lay down the keel!
Any suggestions, ideas, pitfalls to watch for, or things you wish more build logs showed would be greatly appreciated before I get started.
Looking forward to learning from you all.



This is my very first wooden ship build. While I am completely new to the hobby, I have a deep interest in the technical side of building, a preference for self-reliance when it comes to troubleshooting, and a massive fascination with maritime history.
I’ve spent quite a bit of time researching the Sherbourne, following build logs on both Ships of Scale and other forums, and I’ve been genuinely inspired by the incredible standard of work produced by many members here. Some of the builds are absolutely stunning.
Rather than simply producing another standard build log, I’d like to try and make mine genuinely useful — especially from the perspective of a complete beginner who wants to approach the build carefully, thoughtfully, and with as much research as possible.
Before I begin the log properly, I wanted to ask the community:
What would YOU like to see from a first-time builder’s "Sherbourne log" that might make it worthwhile, interesting, or a little different from others already out there?
Some ideas I’ve been considering include:
- honest beginner mistakes and how I corrected them
- planking process and tapering decisions
- paint and colour scheme research (including historically inspired choices)
- tool setup and workspace organisation
- rigging organisation methods for newcomers
- dry fitting and alignment checks before committing to glue
- explanations of things that experienced builders may take for granted
- lessons learned at each stage
- documenting areas where the manual may confuse a beginner
- historical side notes about the real cutter and Royal Navy practices
I’m under no illusion, and this will NOT be a master-class build — but I’d like it to become an honest and well-documented learning journey that may help other newcomers considering their first wooden ship model.
I want to make sure I'm contributing something engaging to the forum rather than just adding noise. What elements do you feel are often missing or glossed over in standard build logs that a new builder could highlight? I’d love to hear your thoughts and suggestions before I lay down the keel!
Any suggestions, ideas, pitfalls to watch for, or things you wish more build logs showed would be greatly appreciated before I get started.
Looking forward to learning from you all.








