During a conversation with an old buddy of mine over on the "Big Island" he reminded me of a batch of koa and other woods he'd saved up for me...just waiting for some money to ship it all to the mainland. It was for a modeling project I'd been toying with a while back to build a series of canoes using scale and historically pre-contact Hawaiian joinery, lashings, the works, and of 100% native materials.
Then I decided to manage pixels:
King Kamehameha's Canoe (1839) interpreted from period drawings. FD Scale.
This would represent a typical double hull war canoe at the time of Western contact. Nearly immediately the Hawaiians adopted "modern" masting, rigging, and sail. Adaptable sailors they were!
Hokule'a (1975) As Launched. FD Scale.
Hokule'a (2005) without all the detachable deck lockers. FD Scale.
Hokule'a is an interesting craft. It was built as a "historically" functional voyaging double hull canoe to emulate the navigation techniques used by ancient Polynesians to colonize Hawaii and other Pacific Islands. Actual construction is somewhat stylized and incorporates a lot of modern materials. Since 1975 it's had a lot of modifications for survivability/functionality as it's done it's many voyages all over the Pacific...sort of a Polynesia meets Kevin Costner's "Waterworld" fusion. Wood, fiberglass, solar panels, plastic coolers, GPS, electronics, and I think I saw an outboard motor in an image.
None of these changes has been documented in an organized fashion (suitable for this site) so I've left off most of the deck clutter.
Have fun with them, feel free to point out corrections to be made.
CraigH