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Perfect shipboard reference, packed with useful "hands-on" information, covers sailor's tools, basic knots and useful hitches, handsewing and canvas work and dozens of other topics important to safe, economic and efficient boat maintenance. Over 100 illustrations enhance delightful narrative.
2012 Reprint of 1952 Edition. Exact facsimile of the original
edition, not reproduced with Optical Recognition Software.
"Knowledge of marlinspike seamanship is what distinguishes the true
seaman from the man who merely ventures upon the water. No one can
become a skipper, or should aspire to that distinction, who has not
mastered knots, palm and needle work, and the making of small
objects on board as necessary. In fact the few required knots,
hitches or bends should be so well known that they can be tied
blindfolded or in the dark....The greatest single value of this
work is the amazing clarity he achieves in his drawings. He has set
a new standard for all time. Rope is a difficult subject to draw.
Like the sea itself, it changes its appearance constantly"-From the
Forward.
2012 Reprint of 1955 Edition. Exact facsimile of the original
edition, not reproduced with Optical Recognition Software. This
book, the first of its kind, makes clear the difference between
"boat carpentry" and "house carpentry." On a boat there is hardly a
straight line, in a house almost all the lines must be straight.
Many tools used by the boat carpenter are almost unknown to the
house carpenter. Amply illustrated, this remains a classic book on
the subject. Few twentieth-century writers could equal Hervey
Garrett Smith's works on the traditional arts of the sailor; none
could surpass them. His descriptions of knotting, splicing, fancy
work, canvas work, and the practice of marlinspike seamanship are
clear, concise, and evocative. So, too, are his drawings, which are
technically accurate, easy to follow, and a joy to behold.
2012 Reprint of 1953 Edition. Exact facsimile of the original
edition, not reproduced with Optical Recognition Software.
Illustrated Edition. A maritime expert offers boating and yachting
enthusiasts a complete course in rigging, working, and maintaining
a ship. The perfect shipboard reference, this volume is packed with
useful "hands-on" information: sailor's tools, basic knots, and
useful hitches; hand sewing and canvas work; and dozens of other
topics important to safety, economy, and efficiency. Over 100
illustrations. Few twentieth-century writers could equal Hervey
Garrett Smith's works on the traditional arts of the sailor; none
could surpass them. His descriptions of knotting, splicing, fancy
work, canvas work, and the practice of marlinspike seamanship are
clear, concise, and evocative. So, too, are his drawings, which are
technically accurate, easy to follow, and a joy to behold. The
"Arts of the Sailor" is Smith's finest book, a compendium of
information that runs the gamut: the anatomy of rope, sailor's
tools, knots, hitches, splicing, whipping, wire and rope service,
hand sewing, decorative rope work, chafing gear, reefing, towing,
cleats, rope-stropped blocks, and making all sorts of gear,
including rope mats, a heaving line, a bosun's chair, and a ditty
bag.
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