Greenheart
Well-Known Member
I've no idea. I've read about Contender dinghy sailors lopping the foot off their sail in order to raise the boom when the mast is raked back. And lots of dinghies and yachts seem to be sold with unexplored lockers full of old part-worn genoas and slightly damaged spinnakers...
...so if one is reasonably acquainted with the shape a sail needs to be for the purpose it'll be put to, just how small is the margin for error between 'good enough' and 'good enough for lamp wicks'? Obviously I'm discounting kevlar/other ultra-modern materials.
I know established sailmakers do an excellent job for rather a lot of money, so my question is whether there is interest and fulfilment in home sail-making, as well as a beneficial element of at-sea-repair ability, to be gained from knowing how...or whether it's only a recipe for frustration.
In the same way many of us needn't call a professional mechanic to diagnose and sort-out basic diesel engine issues, isn't sail-repair one of those sailing competencies that oughtn't to be allowed to fade into history?
...so if one is reasonably acquainted with the shape a sail needs to be for the purpose it'll be put to, just how small is the margin for error between 'good enough' and 'good enough for lamp wicks'? Obviously I'm discounting kevlar/other ultra-modern materials.
I know established sailmakers do an excellent job for rather a lot of money, so my question is whether there is interest and fulfilment in home sail-making, as well as a beneficial element of at-sea-repair ability, to be gained from knowing how...or whether it's only a recipe for frustration.
In the same way many of us needn't call a professional mechanic to diagnose and sort-out basic diesel engine issues, isn't sail-repair one of those sailing competencies that oughtn't to be allowed to fade into history?