Building L Francis Herreshoff's Pram The building of this pram was inspired by the lines and table of offsets in John Gardner's book, "Building Classic Small Craft". These lines and offsets were taken from a half model that John Gardner fashioned after a pram of L. Francis Herreshoff many years ago before including them in his book. This pram is easy to plank due to there being no hard bends or twists in the planking. While it is a simple boat to build, the inexperienced builder should not underestimate the skill level required according to Mr. Gardner. My knowledge of boatbuilding comes from having a father that was a shipwright in the early years of his working life. I also am a graduate of the Northwest School of Wooden Boatbuilding as stated in my profile https://www.nwswb.edu . My previous three posts are about the lofting process. The tools needed are few and the process takes 4-6 hours with some basic knowledge of lofting. Once the lofting is complete
Lofting, day 3 The lofting of the long lines is complete. In the picture on the left you see the completed body plan and if you are looking carefully you will see the Butts drawn in profile near the bottom. At the top of the lofting you will see the half breadth view of the Diagonals. I place the Diagonals out of the way near the top because with a small boat, the lofting gets "busy" and the lines become numerous. I enjoy getting to the Butts and Diagonals because they represent the "Moment of Truth" in the lofting. The Butt lines will be fair if all the body plan is also fair. The same is true with the Diagonals. In this lofting, the Diagonal points in the table of offsets were somewhat unreliable and were only used a fairing points. Some were off as much as 1-2 inches and had to be disregarded. Of course this fact only reinforces the lofting process in getting a nice fair hull. When examining the Butts for fairness, I did in fact see a "flat