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Sometimes --maybe even often-- if a build is being done more "by eye" than tightly constrained by molds and jigs, the hull shape takes on a mind of its own that might differ a bit (or a lot) from the lines of the drawings.
I've never found this to be a problem that couldn't be managed, and this time seems to be no different. My current build is a keel-planked, double-knuckled pram, intended to be built "filleted lapstrake", meaning, the lower edge of each plank lands to the outside of the one below it when the boat is viewed right-side up.
However, as I'm doing my dry-fits, it's pretty obvious that the easiest way to plank this hull is going to be 'conventional lapstrake' for the garboard stake and 'reverse-lapstake' for the sheer strake. Reverse lapstrake is not common in "western countries". But in plenty of eastern countries, "folk builders" build that, and have done so for centuries. So, the technique is not unsound. It's merely "unconventional" to western eyes.
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