And instructions. Epic instructions. They just go on and on. I hope to add more concise printer friendly instructions later but my Christmas brain just isn’t capable of it. We are making Mediterranean inspired little sail boats with lateen rigging – a single triangular sail on a relatively short mast.
What you will need:
download pattern here
large cereal box
scissors
scotch tape
ruler
exacto knife
newspaper- 2 colors
wall paper paste
paint brushes
paint
skewers. dowels or twigs
string
heavy duty thread
needles – various sizes
fabric
buttons
glue

(click thumbnails for larger images)
Download the pattern here and cut it out on the dotted line – the solid lines are for scoring - there are little triangles on one end – you can fold those back to trace the line onto your cardboard and poke your pencil through the tip of the V on the pattern to mark your cardboard.
Use a ruler to draw the lines as shown on the pattern. I’ve highlighted the lines to score in red. Use the BACK of your exacto knife to score the lines in red and then gently bend the boat into shape……
Bring the edges together and secure with lots of scotch tape – they shouldn’t overlap but just meet and last tape the front tips together.
Trim any excess so the back edge is smooth and now you should have a little boat shape. Cut a strip of cardboard that’s about 1 ” by 3″.
Bend that strip into a little triangle shape that fits inside your boat and tape it in , just a little closer to the front (bow ) than the back (stern), this will hold your mast. You’re ready to paper mache – I recommend 2 layers using different papers – so you can see when a layer is complete. You don’t have to let the boat dry between layers but I like to. I start with the inside of the boat closing up the little triangle space – you don’t have to fill it – just close it up.
Notes on paper mache – I find it easiest to do the edges first and the smaller the pieces of paper the smoother and stronger the finished result.  I use golden harvest wheat paste. Add your second layer of paper, let it dry completely then paint it. I used a mixture of latex and water color.
Now you’re ready for the mast and yard ( part that attaches to the sail) . There are a number of things you can use – dowels , skewers, twigs – today I’m using a bamboo skewer for the mast and an 1/8 inch dowel for the yard. I have painted both. Poke a little hole with your exacto knife and insert your mast ( insert the pointy end of the skewer), secure it with glue and trim the top to the desired length – this will depend on the size of your boat ( if you have made the pattern larger or smaller) – my mast is 9 inches tall and my yard is 12 inches long. Use your exacto knife to cut a little notch in your mast about an inch and 1/2 from the top.
The notch will help the button you’re going to tie on stay in place. Tie the button as tightly as you can with your string and secure with a dab of glue. Place the boat on a large piece of paper and lay the yard in place – we’re going to make the pattern for the sail. Hold the yard in place but slide the boat out and draw a triangle shape for your sail.
I like to make a note on the pattern to remind me which side the mast goes on. Cut out your sail. embellish as desired and use a heavy duty thread to sew it to the yard.
Poke holes in the boat for attaching buttons for the rigging. This is a pain in the ass and you need to use something very sharp, I used a really big embroidery needle. You can use as many buttons as you like. I like to have lots of rigging options so I used 4. Once the buttons are on lay the sail on the mast and find the best spot to attach.
Add a length of about 4 inches to the sail where you would like it to attach to the mast and just wind the string around the button on the mast. Attach several inches of string to the bottom corners of the sail and wind those around the buttons on the boat. Tie a loop of string the the mast for hanging, secure it with glue and tie an extra piece of string around to make sure it stays there.
That’s it! I hope you make boats!
You can share your boats here if you like:
http://www.flickr.com/groups/1315046@N23/
I’d love to see!









































these are lovely! can’t wait to try them.
Thank You SO MUCH …
I really really enjoy it !
THANK YOU
oh you are clever, i am going to make one of these for my nephew’s room. thank you!!
I will likely sound like most of the other comments here but let me add my voice by saying: thank you very much for sharing this pattern! I can’t wait to try it and greatly appreciate you sharing a small piece of your talent with us
These are so beautiful!! I am going to try a simplified version with my ESL summer school class this August here in Spain – I love your site and am now starting my own version of 100 horses in my house – thanks a million, mil gracias y un abrazo muy fuerte -
Hoi Ann,
I used this pattern to make a boay out of copper, that I enameled. You can find a picture here: http://beeldenvankarin.blogspot.com/2010/08/weer-lekker-geemailleerd.html
thanks and greetings!
Karin
Hoi Ann,
I used this pattern to make a boat out of copper, that I enameled. You can find a picture here: http://beeldenvankarin.blogspot.com/2010/08/weer-lekker-geemailleerd.html
thanks and greetings!
Karin
Thank you soo very much for sharing this tutorial of your amazing boat design. You are a treasure that I found this morning and I intend on keeping you…hehe! Seriously, I appreciate you sharing this craft and I adore those gorgeous whimsical and so very vintage bedroom curtains; I think once my daughter sees this photo she’ll want this for her bedroom to dream of her secret island hideaway.You are some artist!
p.s. Luv the birds, owls and spiders….way too cool!!! Bookmarked your site and need to read about “Mud-lurking” ….sounds like my kind of fun and the sea.Thanks a bunch for shedding light and adventure my way.
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http://picasaweb.google.ru/meerschaummar/MyDollS10
Thank you so much for sharing this! I teach art to a group of home-school students and they will have a ball with this project!
Gracias por compartir con todas y todos tu creatividad. Desde Mallorca, una isla de España, te agradecemos que nos hayas hecho pasar una tarde de Navidad muy entretenida haciendo tus barcos. Proximamente queremos hacer uno de tus castillos, aunque no encontramos los planos.
En España el día 6 de diciembre nos visitan los reyes magos de Oriente y nos traen regalos. Este año les pediremos un castillo de Ann. Qué te parece? Hablarás con ellos?
Hi,
I would like to thank you soooo much for doing this website because you just saved my life from being killed by my teacher so thanks ALOTTT!!!!!
Wow my teacher really liked the boats =) but she said that it is supposed to sit so it needs a flat surface but i wonder how!??
Merci
I love this, and I can’t wait to try. Thanks for sharing!
Sooo awesome. And the most vital thing imo is that you are using actual sail rigging design! I am always irked at seeing cute boat projects with no sense of how it might actually work on the water. Thank you!
hey can you email me what I should/could use to make Noah’s Art for my religion project??? please email me acampos121985@yahoo.com thanks!!!!!
Fantastic!!!
Your art is absolutely inspiring and beautiful.
REgards from Tuscany
Cata
This is great! I’ve posted about it here – http://wp.me/pkcUM-Ev
thanks,
Emily
I love, love these little boats and plan to make a few along with my grandson. Thanks so much for the tutorial and your beautiful work.
Hello, Ann, posted about your work!!
http://fabricaarcoiris.blogspot.com/2011/05/hip-hip-hurray-for-ann.html
Love this tutorial! Thank you so much, I can’t wait to make some.
Thank you so much for putting this up here and uploading a free pattern! That is so awesome!!!
i love this for my son he cannot wait to try this thank u
Hi Ann,
My students used a variation on this template to create their own ships. You can check them out here – http://useyourcolouredpencils.blogspot.com/2011/05/colonial-ships.html.
Thanks for posting, I love your work.
Wow..it’s lovely!!!You’re great!!.. Nice to meet you..I’m Stefy!!
bye!
Ann
Thank you so much for being so generous as to sharing your designs with us. I have had an idea for a long time to make a boat based upon some lines from a song. I have put it off as I really had no idea how I would make the boat. Mine will be very different from yours but your idea of making a cardboard template has given me a starting point. I shall probably make myself one of your little boats too to hang in my studio and inspire me. Lovely.
Ann,
I just linked to your website via “future girl” site. I am sorry to hear internet users are using your ingenuity as their own, and worse for their profit. I hope you’ve notified the more well known sites (instructables.com) and they at least give you the recognition you deserve. So many sites no longer offer instructions or merely use their sites as a commercial for a business. Thank you for your generosity and I hope you receive the rewards you deserve.
sincerely,
Pam
Wow, Ann! Thank you for sharing this pattern and tutorial. I was just admiring you ships this morning, thinking I should make one for my boyfriend’s brother’s wedding. Seriously, infinite thanks. This how-to will go a long way for me!!
Grazie per aver condiviso questa meraviglia. Un grande abbraccio