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WASA (VASA) model

Wasa is a Swedish warship built between 1626 and 1628. The ship sank after sailing roughly 1,400 yd into her maiden voyage on 10 August 1628. The ship was salvaged with a largely intact hull in 1961. She is housed in a the Vasa Museum in the Royal National City Park in Stockholm.

wasa model

About the construction of the Wasa (Vasa) model:
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Plank-on-frame
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Blackened metal cannons and wooden carriage. Under the main deck, all guns are "real" guns which have metal barrels and wooden carriages which sit on 2 real decks. These guns are not simple barrels inserted into a solid hull like in cheap models.
- Full length masts and bowsprit per construction plans
 (We never cut them short for the convenience of packing and low cost shipping.)

vasa ship

History of the WASA (VASA) ship:

Named for the royal house, Wasa was built to represent the power and glory of the great King Gustave II of Sweden when the country was the dominant military force in the Baltic. Wasa was constructed to be the most powerful and beautiful warships ever to sail the seven seas. She measured 220 feet in length, had masts that were 150 feet high, and carried more than 150,000 square feet of sails.

After three years of construction by over a thousand skilled craftsmen, Wasa was launched on October 10th 1628. Overloaded with cannons and gold sculptures, a sudden gust laid Wasa on her beam-ends. Water rushed in through the open gun ports and, within a matter of minutes, she went down in over 100 feet of water. Wasa went no more than 15 yards on her maiden voyage!

wasa model

The Wasa remained under water for more than three centuries. In 1959, the Swedish government spent $3 million to pull her from the sea floor and transferred her to Statens Sjohistoriska Museum on the Stockholm waterfront. Wasa’s more than a thousand sculptures and fragments constitute the largest collection of mannerist-style seventeenth-century wooden sculpture in the world. She is the most popular tourist attraction in Sweden nowadays.

Dimensions of the Wasa model: 41" long x 33"tall x 12" wide. Email us for price.

vasa model

"The Wasa model has arrived in perfect condition. It is a very beautiful model and I am really very happy with it. You should congratulate your craftsmen for their wonderful work. If you are launching new models please let me know.
 
Best regards,
Philippe Vanderstegen
BELGIUM July 18, 2008"

"I checked around and saw a Vasa model ship billed as museum quality but its middle mast was not straight. Its rigging was oversimplified. Guns didn't have restraining rope. Photos were so fuzzy but I could see some more serious deficiencies... "

Learn more about the Wasa ship here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vasa_(ship)