

Artisan Boatworks has just completed another superb project. Congratulations! You can see her at the Boatbuilders Show in Portland, starting today and running through Sunday. Great way to start the spring!



Artisan Boatworks has just completed another superb project. Congratulations! You can see her at the Boatbuilders Show in Portland, starting today and running through Sunday. Great way to start the spring!


Those who come to Maine for world class sailing, also come for world class boat builders. Benjamin Loveless came for both.
Although the seeds were there, his lust for boats came later in his life, than for some. But now, like so many souls who have salt in their blood, he loves anything, and everything to do with boats.

Lucky to have his first boat building job with a gifted boatsmith, he’s keen to hone his skills and test his grit, on the long trek to mastery.
There is currently a strong resurgence of fine wooden boat building in Maine. Ben might be in just the right spot to catch a steady breeze.

Are you from here or away?
I am from away, born in England, grew up in South Carolina and have been in Maine since Spring of 2002, hoping to never have to leave.
Where do you live?
As of late, it has been Northport, Maine, renting seasonal cottages and condos.

What do you like most / least about living here?
The land is beautiful, the water even more so and I feel that everyone has something going on and move with purpose.
Where do you work?
Artisian Boatworks. I have worked there for over a year now.

What are your responsibilities?
Assisting in the construction, maintenance, care and finishing of our customers’ boats.
What is it’s history?
Alec Brainerd of Rockport, Maine, started the business about five or six years ago. While a new small business, Alec’s taste in yachts and professional manner have brought Artisan Boatworks into a competitive and successful niche market, where I believe his successes will continue to grow.

Were you always interested in boats?
I spent time in my very young days in Dover, England with my grandparents who both worked on the ferries crossing the English channel. Inevitably, I would end up on them from time to time. I used to love watching the hovercrafts come in with my Grandad.
There was a little time in my early twenties working on a trawler and a longliner in the Bering Sea out of Dutch Harbor, Alaska as well as high speed catamarans than ran between Seattle and Victoria Island, British Columbia.

I had always wanted to learn how to sail and eventually sought a berth on the Maine Windjammer Cruises fleet owned by Captain Ray Williamson. I had four great years with them . . . a time that will never be forgotten. No one ever told me in high school that I could be a sailor, captain, or boatbuilder, which I believe to be a shame. My interest was always there, even in the wonderful blur of adolescence.
Do you have one?
I do! Her name is Mary Ellen and she is a Concordia 31. There are only ten hulls of this design in the world and she is the third, built by Bud McIntosh in 1961. Currently, she sits in winter storage awaiting some maintenance.

These photos are of Ben and the Artisan Boat Works crew, working on a one-off, full keel version of Herreshoff’s Buzzard’s Bay 15. The gorgeous boat has just been sanded, and will be ready to debut at the Maine Boatbuilders Show in Portland, March 20-22. Time to celebrate!
To read the full interview, go to this page. To see more photos in a slide show, go to this page.
As the wise bumper sticker says — ‘Life is too short to sail an ugly boat!’
Crowds gathered, bagpipes played and flags waved as French and Webb wrote yet another chapter in the legendary Herreshoff history when they launched their three stunning, and fully restored, Buzzard Bay Thirties. See previous post.
One of the boats, Quakeress II, was mentioned in a July 10, 1902 New York Times article noting that the brand new class of Buzzard Bay Thirties were markedly way ahead of the pack in their first race. Quakeress II was one of them and finished fifth. Wonder if there are any plans to have these three compete in a race before they leave for their intended homes.
And could it be that in the world of boatbuilding, Belfast’s French and Webb could become the next Herreshoff?






Tomorrow these three stunning Herreshoff Buzzard Bay Thirties will be launched at the Belfast public landing at 1:30 pm. Young Miss, Quakeress II, and Lady M have been fully restored by the very talented firm of French and Webb to their 1902 glory. Soon they will grace the waters of Finland, Martha’s Vineyard and Lake Michigan. These guys really know how to make a splash.




