The Bark Canoe Store
2317 West Fairview Avenue
Spokane, WA 99205
(509)327-7902
(509)327-7989
barkcanoe@earthlink.net
www.barkcanoe.com
John Lindman
proprietor/builder |
IN THIS ISSUE
1. News
2. Consignment Board
3. Building Tip - More on Miniatures by Ted Behne
News
Oops!
Last month I accidently sent out the wrong newsletter. Then the correct one went out. So you got
two back to back. The second one was the correct one.
Wooden Boat Article on Birchbark Canoe Builder Steve Cayard
It's been out for quite a while but if you haven't checked out the most recent issue of
Wooden Boat Magazine (December 2004) I recommend you do so. Wood/Canvas canoe builder
Jerry Stelmok wrote an article about Steve Cayard and his birchbark canoe building in Maine.
Good pictures, very nice canoes, good story.
Consignment Board
There is another canoe for sale on the Consignment Page.
Building Tip - Scale Model Birchbark Canoes: Real, Only Small by Ted Behne
Ted has written several fine articles on birchbark canoes for Wooden Boat Magazine, Wooden
Canoe Magazine and others. We are very pleased to feature him this month and in the months to
come on the subject of building scale miniature canoes. J.L.
After looking at one my scale-model birchbark canoes, a visitor asked "Do you build REAL
canoes too?" I had to think for a second before I answered "My models ARE real canoes,
they're just small."
Indeed building scale model birchbark canoes, in the Adney tradition,
means using authentic materials and traditional construction processes, the same as with a
full-size canoe. The difference, of course, is working with scaled down dimensions for ribs,
sheathing, thwarts, gunwales, root lashings, etc. The smaller dimensions must be meticulously
accurate or the finished model will not look like a "real" canoe in miniature.
One of the tests for a well made scale model canoe is whether it can be identified as a model
when photographed against a neutral background with no size references. All 110 of the 1/5-scale
Adney-built models in the Adney Collection of The Mariners' Museum, Newport News, VA, pass
the "can-you-tell-it's-a-model" test. They are so accurate in scale and proportion, in fact,
that full-size canoes can be made by scaling up the measurements from the models alone.
Adney chose to work in 1/5 scale because he said it was the smallest dimension that could
be used without compromising the strength and flexibility of the traditional canoe building
materials. I prefer to work in ¼ scale, partly because the math is easier to calculate in
inches, and partly because I've found that I just can't make 1/5-scale root lashings that
are 3/40 of an inch wide. This thread-like size is between 3/32 and 1/64 of an inch wide.
How Adney did it remains a mystery, but the evidence that he did is there with all of his
models.
As John pointed out in a previous issue in his tips on miniature canoes, making models is a
wonderful way to get started with birchbark canoe building. It allows a beginner to learn
the traditional process, with a relatively small investment of money, time and materials.
The famous Adney book, "The Bark Canoes and Skin Boats of North America" provides both
step-by-step instructions and scale drawings of virtually all the tribal types of birchbark
canoes once made throughout North America. All a beginner really needs are the book, the
basic materials and a desire to learn.
As a starting point, I always make a blow up of a drawing from the Adney book. You'll need a
copy shop that makes large-scale blueprints for contractors and architects, using special
large-scale copy machines. I ask to increase the size of the Adney drawing until the one-foot
scale in the upper left corner measures three inches. The resulting drawing is an exact size
"blueprint" of a ¼-scale model. Precise measurements for thwarts, gunwales, ribs, bow profile,
etc. can then be taken directly from the drawing with high confidence that the resulting model
will be accurate in scale and proportion.
If you've been thinking about building a model, but are afraid it would be too mysterious or
difficult, fear not! Take the leap, buy the basic materials from The Canoe Store, select a
canoe from the Adney book, make a scale blueprint of it and get started. It's a wonderful
winter project. And, as an added incentive, I would be happy to coach anyone through the
step-by-step process. No charge. There are many other tips on model making that are radically
different from those used in full-size construction. Virtually every step of the model process
has some specialized technique that I have learned through trial and error. I will share other
tips in future issues of "The Bark Canoe Aficionado."
Check out some of Ted's REAL small canoes at
Miniatures by Ted Behne.
Ted Behne
tedbehne@comcast.net
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