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HMAV Bounty 1787 - Artesania Latina 1:48 scale, heavily kit bashed

Joined
Nov 16, 2025
Messages
10
Points
28

Location
York, UK
Finally completed end of May 2026 after c.28 years. Started as the original (non cutaway) AL 1:48 kit but then I found the Anatomy of the Ship book in a book shop when on holiday in Falmouth, Cornwall ........ and the rest is history as they say.

During the c.28 years I had long periods of inactivity due to work and family commitments, so its more a tale of resilience and determination to finish.

I kept the basic framework, some deck fittings and the cast metal figurehead. I replaced the wood with pear, lime, boxwood, replaced the stern with my own carving and window construction, coppered the hull to scale with tape and fitted each plate with an overlap to scale and pattern. I also tried my hand at treenailing hull and deck planking and fitted the main cabin with racks for breadfruit pots, to scale. Masting and rigging all to scale per AoS. I even made and stitched my own sails using my daughters sewing machine!

I used AoS, Lees and various other reference books I collected on the way along with various model forums as my guides, rather than AL instructions.

Photo 11 illustrates what a family affair this has been with some scribbled notes in my Anatomy of the Ship book for my guidance from my then 3 year old daughter (now 27).

The experience was a great test bed for modelling techniques, some worked and some didn't but overall I'm ok with the result.

Take care friends, stay safe and happy modelling.

Keith

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Beautiful, perfect build. I will be adding this to the Showcase soon.
 
Finally completed end of May 2026 after c.28 years. Started as the original (non cutaway) AL 1:48 kit but then I found the Anatomy of the Ship book in a book shop when on holiday in Falmouth, Cornwall ........ and the rest is history as they say.

During the c.28 years I had long periods of inactivity due to work and family commitments, so its more a tale of resilience and determination to finish.

I kept the basic framework, some deck fittings and the cast metal figurehead. I replaced the wood with pear, lime, boxwood, replaced the stern with my own carving and window construction, coppered the hull to scale with tape and fitted each plate with an overlap to scale and pattern. I also tried my hand at treenailing hull and deck planking and fitted the main cabin with racks for breadfruit pots, to scale. Masting and rigging all to scale per AoS. I even made and stitched my own sails using my daughters sewing machine!

I used AoS, Lees and various other reference books I collected on the way along with various model forums as my guides, rather than AL instructions.

Photo 11 illustrates what a family affair this has been with some scribbled notes in my Anatomy of the Ship book for my guidance from my then 3 year old daughter (now 27).

The experience was a great test bed for modelling techniques, some worked and some didn't but overall I'm ok with the result.

Take care friends, stay safe and happy modelling.

Keith

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Well Done!
 
"Magnificent" is none too strong an accolade. What a marvelous inspiration to apprentice shipmates to grow their skills, not to mention a grand reminder of halcyon days now past for those of us who are retired professional model shipwrights. Kudos on your perseverance and thank you so much for sharing her with us all.
 
Finally completed end of May 2026 after c.28 years. Started as the original (non cutaway) AL 1:48 kit but then I found the Anatomy of the Ship book in a book shop when on holiday in Falmouth, Cornwall ........ and the rest is history as they say.

During the c.28 years I had long periods of inactivity due to work and family commitments, so its more a tale of resilience and determination to finish.

I kept the basic framework, some deck fittings and the cast metal figurehead. I replaced the wood with pear, lime, boxwood, replaced the stern with my own carving and window construction, coppered the hull to scale with tape and fitted each plate with an overlap to scale and pattern. I also tried my hand at treenailing hull and deck planking and fitted the main cabin with racks for breadfruit pots, to scale. Masting and rigging all to scale per AoS. I even made and stitched my own sails using my daughters sewing machine!

I used AoS, Lees and various other reference books I collected on the way along with various model forums as my guides, rather than AL instructions.

Photo 11 illustrates what a family affair this has been with some scribbled notes in my Anatomy of the Ship book for my guidance from my then 3 year old daughter (now 27).

The experience was a great test bed for modelling techniques, some worked and some didn't but overall I'm ok with the result.

Take care friends, stay safe and happy modelling.

Keith

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Absolutely stunning, Kevin. Do you have any before pictures?
 
There a lot of things to praise, but I love that you are flying a red ensign instead of the white or blue ensign. Not all kits show this properly for Bounty.

Allan
 
Showing close up photos of any build shows confidence in the construction and result. The confidence you have projected is well received. Great job!
 
"Magnificent" is none too strong an accolade. What a marvelous inspiration to apprentice shipmates to grow their skills, not to mention a grand reminder of halcyon days now past for those of us who are retired professional model shipwrights. Kudos on your perseverance and thank you so much for sharing her with us all.
My pleasure, thank you so much for your kind words! I must admit it was touch and go whether I would finish but when you know you've got to finish something you just know, don't give up.
 
Absolutely stunning, Kevin. Do you have any before pictures?
Thanks Doug, my apologies but I don't have any early photos, I just didn't think about creating an album at that time, doh. I do have some I took at the start of this year before I rigged the yards and started the running rigging, I don't think they add much but I'll have a look again and see if they are worth posting.
 
There a lot of things to praise, but I love that you are flying a red ensign instead of the white or blue ensign. Not all kits show this properly for Bounty.

Allan
thanks Allan, appreciate it. I did research the ensign carefully along whether Bounty would have a pennant and conclude on the latter that it would since Bligh was a commissioned officer and the Bounty was commissioned in the King's navy. The research for something like this is all part of the rich learning experience and I learnt and discovered so much during the build.
 
Showing close up photos of any build shows confidence in the construction and result. The confidence you have projected is well received. Great job!
thanks, I learnt a lot during the process, particularly during the research as I have just mentioned on another comment, so I just wanted to share some of what I've learned and it will hopefully help and inspire others who are working on this beautiful ship whilst also remembering much of it is transferable across other ships of the time.
 
The research for something like this is all part of the rich learning experience and I learnt and discovered so much during the build.
Not for everyone as most folks seem to be more into the assembly of the parts which is great but for some like you and others, the research is as much fun and helps produce a more realistic model in many cases.
Allan
 
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