Tuesday, 19 May 2026

Sometimes the Equipment You Need Simply Doesn’t Exist — So We Build It

 


What Happens in the Philip M Russell Ltd Workshop?

Sometimes the Equipment You Need Simply Doesn’t Exist — So We Build It

There is a certain type of problem that starts with a very simple sentence:

“That would be brilliant… if only it existed.”

That sentence is heard quite often in the Philip M Russell Ltd workshop.

Sometimes it is a teaching problem. A student needs to see a physics principle more clearly. Sometimes it is a filming problem. A camera needs to be mounted in a place where no sensible camera has any business being mounted. Sometimes it is a sailing problem. A boat needs a bracket, a mounting plate, a label, a sign, a cover, or a clever little solution that no catalogue seems to contain.

And sometimes, of course, it begins with the dangerous thought:

“I could probably make that.”

That is where the workshop comes in.

Philip M Russell Ltd is not just a teaching business, a video production business, a sailing content project, or a photography and music production setup. Behind all of those things sits a practical research and development space where ideas are designed, tested, broken, redesigned, improved, filmed, and occasionally covered in sawdust, plastic shavings, thread, heat-transfer vinyl, or epoxy.

The workshop is where the company turns “Wouldn’t it be useful if…” into something real.


Why Have a Workshop at All?

At first glance, it might seem odd for a tuition and media company to have a workshop full of tools, materials, printers, cutters, and experimental bits of apparatus.

But once you start teaching science properly, filming lessons professionally, and trying to explain difficult ideas clearly, the need becomes obvious.

Commercial teaching equipment is often very good, but it is not always designed for the way we now teach. A demonstration that works perfectly in a classroom may be almost invisible on camera. A piece of apparatus designed for one student standing at a bench may not work well when viewed through Zoom. A scale may be too small, a reading may be too faint, or a moving part may not show clearly enough for a student watching remotely.

Then there is the cost. Science equipment can be astonishingly expensive, especially when it comes from specialist suppliers. Sometimes the commercial product is worth every penny. Sometimes, however, it solves 80% of the problem at 300% of the budget.

And sometimes the item simply does not exist.

That is where research and development becomes more than a luxury. It becomes part of the teaching process.


Custom Science Teaching Aids

One of the main roles of the workshop is to create and improve science teaching aids.

A good teaching aid does not merely demonstrate a principle. It helps a student think.

For example, a force demonstration should not just show a number on a screen. It should make the student ask:

Why did the force change?
What would happen if the mass doubled?
Why is the graph that shape?
How does this connect to the equation?

That means the apparatus needs to be visible, reliable, simple to understand, and easy to film.

In the workshop, a teaching aid might be redesigned so that:

  • the scale is larger;
  • the labels are clearer;
  • the movement is easier to see;
  • the readings can be captured on camera;
  • the sensor is positioned more accurately;
  • the whole setup works for online tuition as well as in-person teaching.

A small improvement can make a huge difference. A larger pointer, a contrasting background, a better bracket, or a printed guide can turn a confusing demonstration into a memorable one.


PASCO Integrations and Sensor-Based Learning

PASCO equipment is very powerful for teaching science because it allows students to collect real data. Motion, force, temperature, sound, light, pressure, magnetic fields, carbon dioxide, oxygen — all of these can be measured and displayed.

But the real magic happens when sensors are integrated into practical demonstrations.

That is where the workshop becomes important.

A PASCO sensor may need a custom mount. A Smart Cart may need a track modification. A sound sensor may need to be positioned precisely. A magnetic field sensor may need a guide so that it moves smoothly and consistently. A demonstration may need a 3D-printed holder, a laser-cut base, or a simple frame to keep everything aligned.

This is not just making things neat. It is making the science better.

If the apparatus is unstable, the data is noisy. If the alignment is poor, the graph is misleading. If the equipment is difficult to see, the student misses the point.

Good R&D improves both the experiment and the explanation.


DIY Experiment Kit: Making Science Affordable and Visible

There is something deeply satisfying about building an experiment from ordinary materials and still getting excellent results.

A DIY air track, for example, may start life as aluminium tube, carefully drilled holes, and a blower. It is not just a money-saving exercise. It becomes a teaching opportunity in its own right.

Students can discuss:

  • air resistance;
  • friction;
  • pressure;
  • motion;
  • experimental uncertainty;
  • why professional apparatus is designed the way it is;
  • how engineers solve practical problems.

A homemade piece of equipment can often reveal more science than a polished commercial product because the student can see how it works.

There is also a valuable message here: science is not just something that arrives in a box with a logo on it. Science is something you can build, test, measure, question, and improve.

That is an important lesson for GCSE and A-Level students.


Laser Cutting: Precision, Labels, Templates and Prototypes

The laser cutter is one of those workshop tools that quietly changes what is possible.

Need a precise template? Cut it.
Need a labelled panel? Engrave it.
Need a camera alignment guide? Design it.
Need a small sign for a filming setup? Make it.
Need a repeatable part for an experiment? Prototype it.

Laser cutting is particularly useful because it combines accuracy with speed. A design can move from idea to physical object very quickly.

In education, this can be used for:

  • optical bench markers;
  • labelled apparatus panels;
  • measuring scales;
  • circuit board layouts;
  • demonstration templates;
  • model components;
  • clear acrylic overlays for diagrams.

For filming and branding, it can produce:

  • signs;
  • nameplates;
  • display boards;
  • prop pieces;
  • title graphics;
  • workshop labels;
  • camera rig components.

And for sailing projects, it can help create small fittings, templates, graphics, and parts for prototype testing before anything more permanent is made.

The laser cutter is not just a machine. It is a bridge between digital design and practical reality.


3D Printing: The Bracket That Saves the Day

Every workshop with a 3D printer eventually discovers one universal truth:

Most of life is held together by small plastic brackets.

A 3D printer allows the company to make the part that does not exist, the adaptor that should have been included, or the holder that makes everything fit properly.

For teaching, this might include:

  • sensor holders;
  • clamp adaptors;
  • pulley mounts;
  • model components;
  • apparatus feet;
  • demonstration frames.

For filming, it might include:

  • camera mounts;
  • microphone clips;
  • cable guides;
  • monitor brackets;
  • action camera adaptors;
  • lens cap holders.

For sailing and outdoor filming, it can be used to prototype:

  • boat camera mounts;
  • rail clamps;
  • GoPro-style adaptors;
  • protective covers;
  • quick-release fittings;
  • mounting plates.

The first version is rarely perfect. That is the point. R&D is not about getting it right first time. It is about making version one, learning from it, and improving version two.

Sometimes version three is the one that works. Sometimes version seven is the one you admit should have been version one all along.

That, too, is research.


Embroidery, Heat Transfer Printing and Company Branding

Not all workshop development is scientific apparatus. Some of it is branding.

A modern small company needs a visual identity. That identity appears on clothing, bags, banners, covers, signs, video thumbnails, social media graphics, and occasionally on things that were not originally intended to have logos on them.

Embroidery and heat transfer printing allow the company to experiment with:

  • branded clothing;
  • sailing team shirts;
  • workshop aprons;
  • event wear;
  • camera crew clothing;
  • tuition branding;
  • merchandise ideas;
  • A-Rater project designs.

This is especially relevant as the sailing and video projects grow. A boat restoration series, a teaching channel, or a filming project all benefit from a consistent visual identity.

A logo on a shirt may seem like a small detail, but on video it helps tell the viewer that this is not random footage. This is part of a planned project with a recognisable style.

In the workshop, branding becomes physical.


Filming Accessories: Making the Studio Work Better

Video production has its own endless list of workshop problems.

A camera needs to be higher.
A microphone needs to be closer.
A cable needs to be hidden.
A light needs to be angled.
A monitor needs to be mounted.
A demonstration needs to be filmed from above.
A student needs to see a close-up without losing the wider explanation.

Commercial studio accessories exist, of course, but they are not always designed for a science lab, a tuition room, or a boat.

So the workshop produces solutions.

These might include:

  • overhead camera mounts;
  • clamps for awkward angles;
  • monitor stands;
  • cable management systems;
  • small lighting brackets;
  • experiment filming platforms;
  • document camera supports;
  • background boards;
  • close-up demonstration stages.

The aim is always the same: make the explanation clearer.

Good video teaching is not just about having cameras. It is about putting the right camera in the right place at the right time.

That often requires a bit of workshop invention.


Boat Camera Mounts: Filming Where Cameras Shouldn’t Go

Sailing adds a new level of complication.

On land, a camera mount merely has to stay still. On a boat, it has to survive movement, vibration, water, wind, ropes, people, and the occasional unexpected lurch that reminds everyone that gravity still applies.

Filming from a boat requires mounts that are:

  • secure;
  • waterproof or water-resistant;
  • low-profile;
  • easy to remove;
  • safe around ropes and sails;
  • positioned to avoid blocking movement;
  • strong enough to hold the camera steady.

A boat camera mount is not just a filming accessory. It is a safety-critical object. It must not snag a sheet, trip a crew member, damage the boat, or drop expensive camera equipment into the Thames.

This is where workshop prototyping becomes essential.

A first version can be tested gently. A second version can be strengthened. A third version can be redesigned after discovering that the perfect camera angle also perfectly captures the back of someone’s head for twenty minutes.

Sailing filming is full of these lessons.

The best mount is not always the one that looks most impressive. It is the one that captures the story without getting in the way.


Prototype Solutions: The Value of Version One

The word “prototype” is important.

A prototype is not a failure because it is unfinished. It is a question made physical.

Will this fit?
Will this hold?
Will this be visible on camera?
Will the student understand it?
Will it survive a lesson?
Will it survive a sailing day?
Will it survive me carrying it across the workshop while also holding a cup of tea?

A prototype allows you to find the problems before they matter.

In many cases, the first version reveals something unexpected. A bracket is strong enough but too bulky. A scale is accurate but hard to read. A teaching aid works beautifully in person but badly on camera. A camera mount gives a wonderful view until the boom swings across it.

That is why practical R&D matters. You cannot solve every problem on a screen. At some point, you have to build the thing, use the thing, and discover what the thing does when exposed to real life.

Real life is an excellent test engineer.


Why Commercial Products Often Fall Short

This is not a criticism of manufacturers. Many commercial products are excellent.

But commercial equipment is usually designed for a general market. Philip M Russell Ltd often needs equipment for a very specific combination of purposes:

  • teaching GCSE and A-Level students;
  • demonstrating real experiments;
  • filming clearly for online lessons;
  • integrating sensors and data capture;
  • working in a small studio or lab;
  • being robust enough for repeated use;
  • being affordable enough to make sense;
  • sometimes being portable;
  • sometimes being waterproof;
  • sometimes fitting onto a boat.

That is quite a demanding list.

A commercial apparatus might do one job well but fail when placed under a camera. A clamp might work in a laboratory but not on a boat. A science kit might demonstrate the principle but be too small for a student watching online. A filming accessory might be perfect in a studio but useless beside the River Thames.

So the workshop fills the gap.

It adapts, modifies, combines, and occasionally completely reinvents.


The Workshop as a Teaching Philosophy

The workshop is not separate from the teaching. It reflects the teaching philosophy.

Good education is not about simply delivering information. It is about making ideas visible, testable, and understandable.

When a student sees a real experiment, they understand that physics is not just algebra. Chemistry is not just equations. Biology is not just diagrams. Science is something that happens in front of them.

When a student sees a graph appear from real data, they begin to connect theory with measurement.

When an apparatus has been built or adapted, there is another lesson too: problems can be solved creatively.

That is a powerful message.

Students often think science is about knowing the right answer. In reality, science and engineering are often about asking a better question, designing a better test, and improving the method.

The workshop shows that process in action.


Personal Reflection: The Dangerous Joy of “I’ll Just Make One”

There is a slight danger in having a workshop.

Once you know you can make things, you start seeing possible projects everywhere.

A simple lesson becomes a redesign opportunity.
A filming problem becomes a mounting challenge.
A sailing issue becomes a prototype.
A logo becomes a clothing experiment.
A small inconvenience becomes a laser-cut solution.

This can be wonderful. It can also be how a person ends up surrounded by half-finished prototypes, spare brackets, test prints, acrylic offcuts, cable ties, and a notebook full of ideas that seemed perfectly reasonable at midnight.

But that is part of the fun.

The workshop is not just a place where things are made. It is a place where curiosity is allowed to become practical.

And for a company that teaches, films, designs, experiments, sails, records music, and creates content, that practical curiosity is central to everything.


What Happens Next?

The next stage is to continue joining these areas together.

Science apparatus can be designed with filming in mind from the beginning.
Filming accessories can be built for both studio and outdoor use.
Boat camera mounts can support the sailing video projects.
Embroidery and printing can develop the company and A-Rater branding.
PASCO integrations can become clearer, more visual teaching resources.
DIY experiment kits can help students understand difficult topics through real measurement.

The workshop is not there to replace commercial equipment. It is there to improve, adapt, extend, and personalise it.

It is there for the moment when the right tool does not exist.

Because sometimes the answer is not to search another catalogue.

Sometimes the answer is to build it.


Conclusion: A Workshop Full of Questions

So, what happens in the Philip M Russell Ltd workshop?

Science demonstrations are improved.
Teaching aids are redesigned.
Sensors are mounted.
Experiments are made more visible.
Cameras are attached to unlikely things.
Boats gain brackets.
Logos become clothing.
Ideas become prototypes.
Prototypes become better prototypes.
And occasionally, something works exactly as planned, which is always slightly suspicious.

At its heart, the workshop is a place of practical problem-solving.

It supports teaching, filming, sailing, branding, and research. It allows the company to respond to real needs rather than simply accept the limitations of what is available to buy.

Because sometimes the equipment you need simply does not exist.

So we build it.

Monday, 18 May 2026

A Sailing Series Starts Long Before the Boat Reaches the Water


A Sailing Series Starts Long Before the Boat Reaches the Water

A sailing series does not begin with the first race, the first tack, or even the first dramatic shot of the boat heeling over under full sail.

It begins much earlier.

It starts with a name, a colour, a logo, a typeface, a musical idea, a few sketches, and a dangerous moment when someone says:

“Wouldn’t it be nice if we made this look professional?”

That is usually when the trouble begins.

With the arrival of Champagne, my Thames A-Rater, I now have a boat, a restoration project, a future racing story, and the beginnings of a video series. But before the cameras roll properly, there is another job to do: creating the visual identity of the series.

Because this is not just about sailing.

It is about storytelling.

It is about heritage.

It is about making something recognisable before the audience has even pressed play.


Why Branding Matters for a Sailing Series

Branding can sound like something that belongs in a corporate meeting with too many biscuits and not enough useful decisions.

But good branding is really just clear storytelling.

It answers some simple questions:

What kind of story is this?

Is it serious or humorous?

Is it modern or traditional?

Is it a restoration documentary, a racing series, a family adventure, or a slightly worrying record of one man buying a boat that may be taller than his common sense?

In the case of Champagne, it is probably all of those things.

The boat herself gives us a strong starting point. She is a Thames A-Rater, a spectacular river racing boat with an enormous rig, a long history, and a visual presence that makes ordinary dinghies look as though they have forgotten to grow up.

That means the branding cannot be too ordinary. It needs a sense of occasion.


The Core Idea: Heritage Meets YouTube

One of the first creative decisions is the overall style.

There are several possible directions.

A purely vintage yacht club look would suit the A-Rater heritage beautifully. Think classic lettering, cream backgrounds, navy blue, gold details, burgee-style graphics, and the feeling of an old regatta poster.

A very modern YouTube look would use bold colours, large text, high contrast thumbnails, and punchy titles such as:

“We Bought an A-Rater… What Have I Done?”

That works well online, but it risks losing the classic feel of the boat.

A heritage documentary style sits somewhere between the two. It can feel elegant, slightly nostalgic, but still clean enough for YouTube, social media, clothing, thumbnails, and banners.

For Champagne, the best direction is probably a blend:

classic river-racing heritage with a modern digital presentation.

Old boat. New media.

That feels right.


Logo Design Ideas: More Than Just a Pretty Badge

The logo is usually where the identity begins.

For Champagne, there are several obvious visual ideas:

A champagne bottle
A popping cork
A gold ribbon
A tall A-Rater sail
A Thames river line
A classic yacht club shield
A racing burgee
The word Champagne in elegant lettering

The danger is trying to include all of them at once.

A good logo needs to be simple enough to work everywhere: on a YouTube thumbnail, a polo shirt, a boat sticker, a social media profile image, a video title card, and possibly even on the sail.

A complicated logo may look wonderful when it is large, but it becomes a golden smudge when reduced to the size of a phone screen.

A strong direction could be:

A simple A-Rater sail silhouette with a champagne cork or bottle line incorporated subtly into the shape.

Not too jokey.

Not too formal.

Just enough humour to say: yes, we know this is slightly ridiculous, but we are doing it properly.


The Champagne Gold Colour Palette

The obvious colour is gold.

But gold can go wrong very quickly.

Too bright and it looks cheap. Too yellow and it looks like mustard. Too shiny and it becomes impossible to print properly.

A good Champagne colour palette might include:

Champagne gold – for highlights, logo details, and key graphics
Deep navy – for a traditional sailing and yacht club feel
Warm cream – for heritage-style backgrounds
White – for clean modern layouts
Dark charcoal – for readable text and video titles

This gives plenty of flexibility.

For a YouTube thumbnail, navy and gold create strong contrast.

For merchandise, a navy polo shirt with a gold embroidered logo could look smart without being too loud.

For a blog banner, cream and gold can give a softer vintage feeling.

For video title sequences, gold lettering over slow-motion sailing footage could immediately tell the audience: this is not just another boat video.


Typography: Choosing the Voice Before Anyone Speaks

Fonts have personalities.

Some shout.

Some whisper.

Some look as if they should be carved into the wall of a Victorian yacht club.

Some look as if they belong on a packet of energy drink.

For this series, typography needs to do two jobs.

It needs to respect the heritage of Thames A-Raters, but it also needs to work on modern screens.

A possible approach would be to use two fonts:

A classic serif font for the word Champagne and main title cards. This gives elegance, tradition, and a documentary feel.

A clean sans-serif font for subtitles, episode numbers, technical explanations, and YouTube thumbnail text.

That combination gives the brand both history and clarity.

For example:

Champagne could appear in a refined serif style.

Underneath it, a clean subtitle might read:

Restoring and Racing a Thames A-Rater

That immediately tells the audience what they are watching.


Sail Graphics: The Most Public Branding Space of All

The sail is not just part of the boat. It is a huge moving billboard.

That makes sail graphics important, but also slightly dangerous.

It would be easy to get carried away and imagine a full champagne bottle graphic running up the sail, gold bubbles rising into the sky, and perhaps a dramatic cork exploding from the top.

This would certainly be memorable.

It might also get me quietly removed from the club by people with better taste.

A more elegant option would be to keep the sail graphics simple:

The name Champagne in clean lettering
A small champagne bottle symbol
A gold accent line
Possibly a subtle cork or bubble motif

The sail graphic needs to be visible from a distance but not so overwhelming that it turns the boat into a floating party invitation.

The aim is elegance with a smile.


Merchandise: Turning the Project into Something People Recognise

Merchandise is not just about selling things.

It is about identity.

If the series develops properly, there are several possible merchandise ideas:

Polo shirts
Caps
Hoodies
Mugs
Boat park stickers
Crew T-shirts
Supporter badges
Restoration project shirts
“Champagne A-Rater Crew” clothing
“Less Last Racing Team” humour items

The key is to avoid making everything at once.

A sensible first step would be a small, consistent range:

A navy polo shirt with the logo
A cream or white T-shirt with a simple sail graphic
A cap with the Champagne mark
A mug for the workshop or editing desk

The best merchandise should look like it belongs to a real sailing project, not something randomly uploaded to a print-on-demand website at midnight.

Although, to be fair, quite a lot of creative work does happen at midnight.


Social Media Banners: Making the Project Recognisable at a Glance

The branding also needs to work across social media.

That means banners for:

YouTube
Facebook
X
LinkedIn
Instagram
Bluesky
Blogspot
pmrsailing.uk

Each platform crops images differently, which is one of the more irritating facts of modern life.

A good banner design needs a safe central area containing the main message, with extra visual material at the edges that can be cropped without ruining the design.

A possible banner could include:

A wide image of Champagne in the boat park or under sail
The logo on one side
The phrase Restoring and Racing a Thames A-Rater
A gold line or ribbon across the design
A small pmrsailing.uk reference

For the company blog, the banner can also show the creative process: sketches, colour swatches, typography tests, embroidery mock-ups, video timelines, and thumbnail experiments.

That is important because this blog is not only about sailing. It is about the work Philip M Russell Ltd does behind the scenes: video production, design, branding, music, photography, and storytelling.


YouTube Thumbnails: Heritage Has to Compete with Everything Else

YouTube thumbnails are brutal.

A tasteful heritage design may look beautiful, but if nobody clicks on it, it has failed.

The challenge is to make thumbnails that are both classy and clickable.

Possible thumbnail styles:

Episode 1:
Large text: WE BOUGHT AN A-RATER
Image: Champagne in the boat park
Expression: mild panic from the new owner
Gold badge: New Series

Intros and Title Sequences: Setting the Tone

The title sequence is where the brand becomes a film.

This is where the logo, music, footage, and mood all come together.

For Champagne, the intro could open with quiet sounds:

Water moving against the hull
Rigging tapping in the wind
A distant club sound
A soft musical theme from the Wersi and synth setup

Then the visuals could build:

Close-up of varnish
Hands on ropes
The tall mast
Old A-Rater photographs or archive-style textures
The name Champagne appearing in gold
A final shot of the boat on the Thames

The title appears:

Champagne
A Thames A-Rater Story

The music should not be generic stock music. It needs to feel like the series: elegant, slightly adventurous, a little humorous, and occasionally dramatic when racing goes wrong.

Which, let us be honest, is likely.


The Balance Between Serious and Humorous

One of the most important branding decisions is tone.

The Thames A-Rater class has serious history. These are beautiful, important, technically fascinating boats.

But my own sailing journey has never been entirely serious.

There is always the slight possibility of confusion, overconfidence, unexpected wind shifts, equipment problems, and me wondering whether I have made a sensible decision.

The brand should allow both.

It should be elegant enough to respect the boat, but warm enough to include the reality of learning, restoring, filming, and occasionally making mistakes in public.

That means the writing, visuals, and video style should not be too polished or too distant.

The audience should feel invited into the project.

Not lectured.

Not sold to.

Invited.


Practical Workflow: From Idea to Finished Brand

The creative process needs structure.

A practical workflow might look like this:

1. Define the story

Before designing anything, decide what the series is really about.

For Champagne, the story could be:

A classic Thames A-Rater restoration and racing journey, told through video, music, photography, humour, and practical sailing experience.

That sentence becomes the creative anchor.

2. Create mood boards

Collect examples of:

Vintage sailing posters
Yacht club badges
River racing photographs
Champagne labels
Classic documentary title cards
Modern YouTube thumbnails
Sail graphics
Polo shirt embroidery

The point is not to copy, but to identify the visual world the project belongs to.

3. Sketch rough logo ideas

Do not begin with perfection.

Begin with rough shapes:

Sail silhouette
Bottle outline
Cork motif
Shield shape
Burgee shape
Lettering ideas

Most will be terrible. That is normal. Terrible sketches are often the path to useful ones.

4. Test colours

Try the gold, navy, cream, white, and charcoal palette in real situations:

On a thumbnail
On a banner
On a T-shirt
On a logo
On a sail mock-up
On a phone screen

Colours that look good in isolation may fail when used practically.

5. Build templates

Once the style is settled, create reusable templates:

YouTube thumbnail
Video intro
End screen
Blog banner
X post image
LinkedIn image
Instagram square
Merchandise mock-up
Lower-third caption for videos

Templates save time and keep everything consistent.

6. Refine through use

The brand will improve as the project develops.

A logo that looks good in a design file may need adjusting once it appears on a cap, sail, or YouTube thumbnail.

Branding is not a single decision. It is a living system.

Rather like a boat, it needs trimming.


What This Says About Philip M Russell Ltd - My Company

This is exactly the sort of project that shows how varied the company’s work has become.

On the surface, it is a sailing project.

Underneath, it involves:

Graphic design
Photography
Video production
Music composition
Social media planning
Website content
Merchandise design
Story development
Technical filming
Brand strategy

That is what makes it such an interesting company blog topic.

Philip M Russell Ltd is not just producing content. It is building linked creative projects where science, sailing, teaching, design, music, and video all overlap.

The Champagne A-Rater series is a perfect example.

The boat is the subject.

But the process is the story.


Conclusion: The Brand Is the First Sail

Before Champagne is restored, launched, raced, filmed, or perhaps gently embarrassed in front of the rest of the fleet, she already needs an identity.

The branding is not decoration added at the end.

It is part of how the story is told from the beginning.

The logo, colours, music, thumbnails, banners, sail graphics, and title sequence all help the audience understand what kind of journey this will be.

A little heritage.

A little humour.

A little gold.

A lot of learning.

And, I suspect, quite a few moments where the camera is rolling and I wish it wasn’t.

But that is the point.

A sailing series starts long before the boat reaches the water.

And in the case of Champagne, the first thing to launch may not be the boat at all.

It may be the brand.

Sunday, 17 May 2026

Writing Music for Boats: Creating the Sound of an A-Rater

 




Writing Music for Boats: Creating the Sound of an A-Rater

Before the audience sees the boat, they hear what kind of story it will be

When people think about making a sailing film, they usually think about cameras first.

Which camera should I use?
Where should I mount it?
Should I film in 360°?
How do I stop the microphone sounding like it has been placed inside a small hurricane?

All good questions.

But there is another part of film-making that can completely change the way an audience feels about a boat before they have even properly seen it.

Music.

Before the sail fills, before the hull slides through the water, before the crew start looking busy and pretending they know exactly what is happening, the soundtrack has already told the audience what kind of story they are watching.

Is this elegant?
Is this dramatic?
Is this nostalgic?
Is this slightly ridiculous but done with great enthusiasm?

In the case of an A-Rater, the answer may be: all of the above.


Why boats need their own sound

A boat is not just a subject for a film. It has a personality.

A modern racing dinghy has one sort of energy. A cruising yacht in Croatia has another. A silent electric Whaly camera boat drifting gently along the Thames has a completely different feel again.

But an A-Rater is something else.

The Thames A-Rater is long, elegant, slightly improbable, and gloriously dramatic. The rig is enormous. The sails seem to reach towards the clouds. The whole boat looks as if someone started with the idea of a river sailing dinghy and then decided that restraint was unnecessary.

So the music cannot simply be generic “nice sailing music”.

It has to suggest height, history, elegance, danger, comedy, and ambition — preferably without making the audience feel they are watching an advert for luxury aftershave.

That is where writing original music becomes so useful.


Why stock music often feels wrong

Stock music is incredibly useful, and there is nothing wrong with it. For many projects, it does the job perfectly.

But it can also feel slightly detached from the film.

A lot of stock sailing music falls into predictable categories:

The corporate inspirational track

This usually starts with soft piano, then adds strings, then a drum pattern, then builds towards something that sounds like a technology company has just discovered teamwork.

It can work for a promotional film, but it does not always fit a real boat on a real river.

The epic trailer track

Huge drums. Massive strings. Possibly the suggestion that the fate of civilisation depends on whether we successfully round the next buoy.

Exciting, yes. Subtle, no.

The cheerful ukulele problem

For some reason, cheerful travel films often seem to involve ukuleles. This is fine if the film is about making pancakes in a camper van, but it may not be ideal for a classic racing boat with a mast that looks taller than some church spires. So I have to think of something else.

The smooth background wash

This is the music that does not offend anybody because nobody notices it. The problem is that boats are full of movement, tension, noise, and atmosphere. The music should support that, not flatten it.

Original music allows the sound to be designed around the actual boat, the actual footage, and the actual story.


The Wersi, synthesisers, and the home studio approach

One of the advantages of having a music setup at home is that I do not have to begin with someone else’s idea of what sailing should sound like.

I can sit at the Wersi digital organ, use the synthesiser setup, build layers, experiment with textures, and gradually discover the musical identity of the film.

The Wersi gives access to organ tones, orchestral sounds, rhythm arrangements, and layered textures. The synthesiser side adds something different: pads, movement, atmosphere, bass pulses, shimmering effects, and strange sounds that do not obviously belong to any traditional instrument.

That is useful because an A-Rater is not simply old-fashioned. It is a mixture of old and new.

The boats have heritage. Some have wooden hulls and long histories. Champagne, although built in about 1980, comes from the mould of an older A-Rater design linked to Ulva, and therefore sits in that fascinating space between tradition and practicality.

So the music can also mix old and new.

A hint of organ.
A wash of strings.
A modern synth pad.
A rhythmic pulse for racing.
Perhaps even a slightly Edwardian flavour for Vanessa, with something more polished and sparkling for Champagne.

That is the fun of composing for a series rather than choosing a track at the end.


The A-Rater sound: elegance first

For the classic boat footage, the music needs room to breathe.

A-Raters do not look right with frantic music all the time. When they are gliding past the trees at Upper Thames Sailing Club, they need space. The camera needs time to enjoy the hull shape, the height of the rig, the reflection in the water, and that slightly unreal moment when the boat seems far too tall for the river.

This suggests slower, more elegant music.

Not slow as in dull.
Slow as in confident.

A gentle tempo allows the visuals to carry the movement. The music should not force drama where the boat already provides it. Instead, it should lift the image.

A possible musical approach might include:

A slow pulse underneath, almost like the movement of water.
Warm chords on the organ or synthesiser.
A high string or pad line to suggest the height of the rig.
A simple melodic theme that can return throughout the series.
Light rhythmic details that feel like reflections, ripples, or rigging movement.

The aim is not to write “background music”. The aim is to create the feeling that this boat has arrived with its own history.


Racing needs a different musical language

Of course, A-Raters are not museum pieces.

They race.

And once they are racing, the music has to change.

A-Rater racing on the Thames is visually wonderful because everything is slightly compressed. The river is narrow, the wind is unpredictable, the trees interfere, the marks arrive quickly, and a boat with a very tall rig suddenly has to behave itself in a confined space.

This is where the soundtrack can become more dramatic.

The tempo can rise.
The rhythm can become more urgent.
The bass can suggest pressure.
Percussion can match the timing of tacks, gybes, mark roundings, and sudden decisions.

But even here, the music should not become too heavy. These are not offshore racing machines blasting through the Southern Ocean. They are elegant river racers, and that elegance still matters.

The challenge is to write music that says:

“This is exciting.”

But not:

“An asteroid is about to hit the Thames.”


Matching tempo to sailing movement

One of the most important decisions in a sailing soundtrack is tempo.

Sailing footage often looks slower on screen than it felt at the time. When you are in the boat, everything feels active. The wind shifts, ropes move, the boom comes across, someone says something important at exactly the moment the camera microphone is facing the wrong way, and your brain is working hard.

But on film, unless edited carefully, sailing can look gentle.

That means the music has to help the audience feel the movement without pretending the boat is travelling at 70 mph.

For elegant A-Rater footage, a slower tempo may work beautifully. For racing footage, a medium tempo with a steady pulse might be better. For chaotic moments — perhaps launching, rigging, discovering a problem with a cover, or trying to work out where everything goes — the music can become lighter and more humorous.

A few practical examples:

Slow glide past the clubhouse

Use a broad, warm theme. Long notes. Gentle movement. Let the boat look magnificent.

Raising the mast

Use a gradual build. Start sparse, then add layers as the mast rises. The music can create anticipation.

First sail after restoration

Bring in the main Champagne theme. This should feel like a reveal, not just another sequence.

Close racing near a mark

Use a stronger pulse, shorter notes, and rhythmic tension. The music should support quick decisions and movement.

Something goes wrong

Do not overdo the drama. Sometimes a light musical touch works better, especially if the situation is annoying rather than dangerous.


The hidden orchestra: wind, water, rigging and harbour noise

Music is only part of the soundtrack.

Boats already make music.

The wind in the rigging.
The slap of water on the hull.
The creak of ropes.
The sound of blocks turning.
Footsteps on the boat.
Voices from other crews.
A distant engine.
The sound of halyards tapping against masts in the boat park.

These sounds are not noise to be removed automatically. They are part of the world of the film.

The trick is deciding what to keep, what to reduce, and what to feature.

For example, the sound of water under the hull can make a quiet sailing sequence feel real. Rigging sounds can give atmosphere to a boat park scene. Harbour or club background noise can establish place. Wind noise, however, can easily become unpleasant if it overwhelms everything else.

So the soundtrack becomes a blend:

Original music gives emotional structure.
Natural sound gives realism.
Dialogue gives information.
Silence gives space.

Sometimes the most powerful moment in a sailing film might be when the music drops away and we just hear the water.


Giving Champagne her own theme

Champagne needs a musical identity.

The name already suggests something light, celebratory, elegant, and perhaps slightly dangerous if handled carelessly.

The theme for Champagne should probably not be too heavy. It should have sparkle.

That might mean:

Bright upper notes.
A rising melody.
A sense of movement and optimism.
A rhythm that suggests a boat beginning to accelerate.
A little musical “pop” or shimmer to reflect the name.

But Champagne is also an A-Rater, so the music must still carry some classic weight. It cannot be frivolous all the time. The theme needs to work when she is sitting in the boat park awaiting work, when the mast is raised, when the cover is designed, when the first sail happens, and eventually when she joins the racing fleet.

In other words, the theme has to grow with the project.

At the start, it might be incomplete — a few notes, a sketch, a promise.
As the restoration develops, more instruments can be added.
When Champagne finally sails, the full theme can appear.

That is one of the advantages of writing music as part of the series. The soundtrack can evolve with the story.


Vanessa and the sound of restoration

Vanessa suggests a different musical world.

As an older boat with restoration at the heart of the story, her music could lean more towards history, craftsmanship, and patience.

This does not mean making everything sound like a sepia photograph. But the tone could be warmer, more reflective, perhaps with hints of older dance forms or Edwardian atmosphere.

A Vanessa theme might use:

A slower melody.
Organ or harmonium-like tones.
Strings or woodwind-style sounds.
Gentle percussion rather than a strong beat.
More space and a sense of memory.

The music for Vanessa should make the viewer feel that this is not just a boat repair. It is a return.

A return to the river.
A return to racing.
A return to being seen, heard, and sailed again.

This is Vanessa's Theme


Branding the A-Rater series through sound

Branding is not just logos, colours, clothing, thumbnails, and titles.

Sound is branding too.

A strong musical identity can make a YouTube series feel more professional and more memorable. If the same theme appears in the intro, the episode transitions, the title cards, and the closing sequence, the audience begins to associate that sound with the project.

For the A-Rater series, the soundtrack can help connect several different types of content:

Restoration updates.
Boat park problem-solving.
Racing footage.
Historical explanations.
Interviews.
Workshop design.
Merchandise and branding work.
The first sail.
Bourne End Week.
The Queen’s Cup.
The wider A-Rater fleet.

Each episode can have its own mood, but the series should still sound like one world.

That is the goal: not just music for a video, but a recognisable sound for Champagne, Vanessa, and the A-Rater story.


Practical workflow: from footage to finished soundtrack

The process usually starts with the film, not the music.

I need to see what the footage is actually doing. A piece of music that sounds wonderful on its own may fight the edit completely.

A practical workflow might look like this:

1. Watch the rough edit without music

This is where the film reveals its natural rhythm. Are the shots long and elegant? Is the edit fast and practical? Is this a technical explanation, a story sequence, or a dramatic moment?

2. Mark the emotional turning points

Where does the audience need to feel anticipation?
Where does the mood lift?
Where should the music stop?
Where does the boat reveal itself?

3. Build a simple theme

Start with a melody or chord sequence. Keep it simple enough to return in different forms.

4. Add layers gradually

Use organ, synth pads, strings, bass, percussion, and effects only where they help the picture.

5. Mix natural sound back in

The music should not bury the boat. If we cannot hear water, ropes, voices, or the atmosphere of the river, something has been lost.

6. Test it on ordinary speakers

A soundtrack that works beautifully in the studio may not work on a phone, tablet, or laptop. Since many people watch YouTube on small speakers, clarity matters.


The danger of too much music

There is one big trap in writing your own soundtrack.

You become attached to it.

After spending time creating a theme, adjusting layers, finding the right sound, and convincing yourself that this particular chord change is essential to civilisation, it is very easy to make the music too loud.

But in a film, the music is there to serve the story.

If someone is explaining how the rig works, the music must move out of the way. If there is useful natural sound, the music should leave space. If the scene is already emotional, the music may only need to support it gently.

The best soundtrack is often the one the audience feels without consciously analysing.

Unless they are musicians. Then they will notice everything.


A personal reflection: why this crossover matters

This is one of the reasons I enjoy running Philip M Russell Ltd. The work rarely fits into one neat box.

Teaching leads to video production.
Video production leads to sound design.
Sound design leads to music.
Sailing leads to engineering problems.
Engineering problems lead to workshop projects.
Workshop projects lead back into teaching.

The A-Rater project brings all of this together.

Champagne is not just a boat. She is a story, a restoration project, a filming subject, a branding exercise, a musical theme, and probably a source of many future moments where I stand in a boat park wondering what I have done.

And that is exactly why she needs her own sound.


Conclusion: the boat should sound like the story it carries

A sailing film is not just a record of what happened on the water.

It is an attempt to make the audience feel what it was like to be there.

For an A-Rater, that feeling is unusual. It is elegant, historic, slightly mad, technically fascinating, and visually spectacular. The soundtrack should reflect that.

Stock music can fill a gap, but original music can do something better. It can become part of the identity of the boat. It can make Champagne feel like Champagne. It can give Vanessa a sense of history and return. It can turn a sequence of clips into a recognisable series.

Before the audience sees the boat, they hear what kind of story it will be.

And with an A-Rater, the story deserves a theme of its own.