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Silent Mary by Mellpapa

The double-headed Eagle was a symbol of the Byzantine Empire and the Holy Roman Empire. Later, it was adopted by the Hapsburg Empire. So perhaps not a surprising coincidence, but no less a good reason to work together on your own wonderful projects.
Hello, Namabiiru.
Thank you for explaining the double-headed eagle. :D
 
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The sails for the foremast, split-sloop topmast, and mizzenmast were constructed, sprayed with clear coat, and weathered.
They are drying on the case holding the blueprints.

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Attach a cleat to each sail.

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The top one is an earring, the four below are crinkles, and the very bottom is a clump... or so I intended.

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I printed the double-headed eagle decals.
The top is the front side decal, the bottom is the back side decal.
The difference is...
The patch on the belly is reversed left and right between the front and back.

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To transfer the decal onto the front side of the sail, place the illustration on the light table, lay the transparent film over it, and secure it with tape.

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Place the main lower sail with its weathered paint finish on top.

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When held up to the light, an illustration of a double-headed eagle appears.
This shows where to apply the decal.

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Soak the decal in water and wait for it to separate from the backing paper.

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If the decal starts to peel off the backing sheet, quickly transfer it to the sail.

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While cutting and peeling off the transparent varnish part of the decal with a design knife... the decal in the blue circle area shattered.

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I corrected it using Tamiya lacquer paint (matte black).

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The decals and retouched areas are completely dry, so I sprayed them with matte clear lacquer to eliminate the decals' gloss.
The front side of the main lower sail is now complete.
I haven't attached the reef points yet.
I'll apply decals to the back side too, but that's a job for tomorrow.

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This is a concept illustration of the sail published online.
I believe this is the back side of the sail.
Please look at the illustration below.
The patch section on the belly is the same.
If you flip the patch section left to right, it becomes the illustration of the sail's front side.

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This concept art has a shallow waterline.

I'll post again after I finish the next step.:)
Bravo!
 
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Foot ropes and pulleys were attached to the mainmast's lower yard, top yard, and top gallant yard.
We had made about 74 pulleys, but using about 34 on the mainmast's yards leaves us completely short.

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I will make a single pulley.
I will carve grooves into all four sides of a 2×2×900mm cypress board, drill holes, and shape each piece individually to create it.

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Shape it like this, then sand it down...

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Cut out the shaped pulleys.
I'll make a whole bunch of these by repeating this process.

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The pale pulley on the left is the newly made pulley.
I made about 88 of them.
The brown-stained pulleys on the left are stock pulleys, and there are about 40 of them.

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The newly made single pulleys were stained with dark walnut wood oil.
Combined with the old ones, I now have 128 single pulleys.
This should be enough... if not, I'll just make more.

The mainmast's lower yard, top yard, and top gallant yard are done, so next I'll start working on the foremast and mizzenmast yards. :)
 
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