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Bernard Frölich has always
been a builder of ship's models. As a geographical
engineer, he discovered Jean Boudriot's books and
monographs in the late 70s. He fell in love with
the beauty of sailing ships of the classic period
and since then has dedicated all his free time to
building historical navy models.
This practical experience made him a genuine
authority in that field. He has published numerous
articles on that subject over the past years. At
our request, he has gathered, edited and
significantly enriched these articles in order to
produce his book.
L'ART DU MODELISME describes the author's
experience and methods in 300 pages abundantly
illustrated with numerous drawings, sketchs and
more than 600 commentated photos. In this book,
Frölich describes in detail all the crafts
that a shipmodeler must master : he must be in turn
a shipwright; a carpenter; a cabinetmaker; a
marqueter; a blacksmith; a ropemaker and a
sailmaker. He shows that any beginner, if he is
industrious and persevering, can master this art.
This fact becomes all the more evident since we can
see the tremendous progress made by the author
himself through the use of photographs of his own
work. This book itself is a tremendous learning
experience. In the first twenty pages Frölich
describes his studio, his tools and equipment and
his library. He then devotes about one hundred
pages to the timbers of a 1730 merchant vessel ,
the Mercure, and to M.de Tourville 's three-decker
vessel of 1680, L'Ambitieux. In the next one
hundred twenty pages, the author discusses the
equipment, fittings, guns, decoration and
sculptures, ship's boats and rigging. The final
sixty pages offer a description of Frölich's
own models (all at 1:48 scale ) : the schooner
Jacinthe; the lugger Coureur; the brig Cyclope; the
bomb ketch Salamandre; the 12-pdr frigate Belle
Poule; the merchant vessel Mercure and the xebec
Requin. The unfinished model of L'Ambitieux - the
Chevalier de Tourville's three-decker vessel - is
abundantly described in the chapter on
framework.
Although the author denies it, this book is a
genuine treatise on historical naval shipmodeling.
The photographs included show that the skills of
today 's shipmodelers match the talent of the
creators of the period model pieces preserved and
displayed in our museums.
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