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The Tea Clipper Ship Cutty Sark
was built in 1869 at Dumbarton, Scotland. She was destined for the China tea
trade, then an intensely competitive race across the globe from China to London.
In the end, clippers lost out to steamships that could pass through the recently
opened Suez Canal and deliver goods more reliably. Cutty Sark was then used for
the Australian wool trade and sold in 1895 to a Portuguese company, returning to
the UK in 1923. In 1954, Cutty Sark was restored and moved to a custom-built dry-dock and put on
public display at Greenwich, London. The exceptional elegance and beauty of her
line, allied to her incredible speed and wealth of details, have contributed to
the unique legend of the Cutty Sark.
New wood kit Cutty Sark by Artesania Latina
features single plank-on-bulkhead construction with pre-cut wooden parts. You’ll
plank the hull with individual mahogany strips, while limewood planking covers
the deckhouse and decks. Fine African walnut is used for keel, stem, waterways,
coamings, hatch covers, door frames, masts and yards. Hardwood fittings include
deadeyes, blocks and cleats. Brass is plentiful in the form of stanchions,
rings, belaying pins, eyebolts, navigation lights and housings, rudder hinges,
chain, bell, chimney and mastheads. Anchors, bitts, boats, boat frames, davits,
signaling cannon, life rings, figurehead, trusses, hoops and other parts are
cast metal. Rigging line is supplied in a variety of sizes, and cloth flag and
pennants add realistic detail. Six large sheets of plans, 36 page book
containing 120 color photos of every phase of construction and English
instructions.
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