Good evening Iceman
very very beautiful works-- actually printing the thing to build a non-virtual model seems almost
errr...? superfluous?
anyhow;-- my Business-- JB YACHT SERVICES ....
manufactures canvas boat covers-- ranging from super-yachts--sail and motor
down to some very very mundane small boats.( some really tatty ones too! )
Our covers are well known for being beautifully taut and setting perfectly ( no creases in canvas or windows)
To achieve tension in canvas -- using ties or lacing--requires the tensioning media ( ie rope/strap/) to be tight !
absolutely THE ONLY flaw I have ascertained so far in any of your very excellent works....( and ist a minor flaw!)
is that the beautiful taut canvas on the boat in your render ...
would not be able to be -in my opinion-- achieved with 'slack' lacing line....
I have superimposed on your image posted below ---how I think the tensioned lacing line should look.
as a secondary thought-- ....
unlacing a cover like that via pulling rope through eyes is a tedious and quite a slow task,
and not on that should be undertaken if the boat was was to be launched in an emergency
I do wonder if the lacing eyes drawn -should not actually be hooks--so that the line can be slipped andt he cover pulled off quickly
probably im
material ( haha !

) in a 1/200 scale model-- but just a thought for the visual render...?
I am following this thread with great interest and admire the research and interpretation of a fuzzy image to a credible conclusion
Bravo !
JIM Baumann
and one of mine --all over cover on a Fairey Super-swordsman
and an example of tensioned line