Possibly the wreck of the Warren Sawyer, a late 19th century three-masted schooner wrecked in December 1884 west of Surfside Beach, Nantucket
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Nansen - art by Boris Artzybasheff (1940)
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Joseph Cornell (American, 1903-1972)
Untitled (Schooner)
1931
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Enthusiastically borrowed from Schooner Bum Memes
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‘Elena’
Elena is a traditional sailing schooner that was built and launched in 2009 from Factoria Naval de Marin. Elena has been conscientiously recreated from Morton Plant’s 1910 commission of the same name using the original drawings by designer Nathaniel G Herreshoff.
Photo by James Robinson Taylor
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Written by: @virtual-winter
June 7th, 2023
The title kinda says it all. This was a quick analysis I made covering the very niche topic of Prince Hans' ship. I found it has a much stronger presence in the franchise than you might think!
For a long time, I only had a single piece of concept art by Cory Loftis to go on but after finding the profile view in this post's title, I started looking for it in the movies. And it was there alright!
I owe great thanks to the fantastic blog @theartoffrozen (that collects amazing Frozen concept art) for being the source of many of the pics for this analysis!
So, here is my walk-trough of every appearance of Hans' ship!
/virtual-winter
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This is so very specific and yet weirdly generic?! A War of 1812 t-shirt, from a vendor who seemingly doesn't have any related merchandise, and just: Schooners. Not a specific ship, but a type of ship. Did they mean to go for the Baltimore clipper but ended up with the schooner? I was looking up Fort George t-shirts when this came up and so help me I bought one, I can't resist War of 1812 boat shirt.
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Chapter 3: Page 21
Prev /
Start at the Beginning!
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Back in the summer of 1905 the 2-masted schooner "E. M. Sawyer" wrecked on the southern tip of Monhegan Island, Maine. The moment was captured by S. P. Rolt Triscott
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“Cruising Cursors”
Illustrator: Yarek Waszul
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Here we have what remains of the Evelina M. Goulart, built at the A.D. Story Shipyard (now the Essex Shipbuilding Museum) in Essex Massachusetts in 1927.
What made her unique was she fished year round- during summer she’d be fitted with a bowsprit and tall fore topmast for swordfishing, and in winter fitted for dragging fishing nets.
In this portrait by Alvaro Acores you can see how she would have been rigged for winter fishing, with a pilot house built over the wheel.
She is only one of seven remaining Essex-built fishing schooners, and has been relatively unchanged since 1927. She continued fishing until she was damaged and sunk by Hurricane Gloria in 1985. She was raised and donated to the museum
Today she sits in the shipyard where she was built as an example of one of the hundreds of vessels that were built in Essex and all across New England.
And here’s me for scale!
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Schoonerposting: the Pilot getting ready for the season as a restaurant, but she’s circumnavigated the globe.
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