
Inside Angle: The $1000 Plumbing “Fix“
Can a last-minute, back-of-the-napkin calculation rescue Bill Prince’s sacred family cruise? Find out.

Can a last-minute, back-of-the-napkin calculation rescue Bill Prince’s sacred family cruise? Find out.

Ever wondered what a day in the life of a yacht designer looks like? Bill Prince tells how it is—and isn’t—a lot like yours.

While talking with a friend about dog collars, Bill Prince gets a lesson on the value of communication.

The world’s preeminent minds seem to agree: as a species, just being out on the water provides unseen healing properties.

When it comes to a big debut on the world’s largest boating stage, the show must go on no matter what. Even if it means canceling your appointments to join the wash crew.

While we’re certainly inundated with all manner of screens nowadays, nothing can replace some well-earned local knowledge and a trusty gut.

A napkin sketch is usually an inessential piece of design ephemera. When a client requests to keep his, all hell breaks loose.

As a longtime yacht designer, Bill Prince has seen it all. Some of it he can write about; some of it he can’t.

The hullside window divide continues to split boaters. As hullside windows increase in size and abundance, the only place they are still anathema is on sportfishermen.

The author recalls trying to wrangle a pesky catamaran and protect a beloved photographer.

As day-boats continue to grow in size, designer Bill Prince wonders if we’re not far off from the “day-superyacht.”

Bill Prince looks back on 25 years of attending the largest in-water boat show in the world: Ft. Lauderdale.

Are engine rooms in danger of becoming extinct? New and bigger propulsion options are changing the way boats are designed and enjoyed.

The iconic tuna tower’s end comes not with a bang but with a bzzz—drones are steadily gaining ground offshore. Bill Prince explains why.

Thanks in part to the Queen Mary’s paper-thin walls, Bill Prince is forced to take part in a couple’s anniversary celebration.

Can a last-minute, back-of-the-napkin calculation rescue Bill Prince’s sacred family cruise? Find out.

Ever wondered what a day in the life of a yacht designer looks like? Bill Prince tells how it is—and isn’t—a lot like yours.

While talking with a friend about dog collars, Bill Prince gets a lesson on the value of communication.

The world’s preeminent minds seem to agree: as a species, just being out on the water provides unseen healing properties.

When it comes to a big debut on the world’s largest boating stage, the show must go on no matter what. Even if it means canceling your appointments to join the wash crew.

While we’re certainly inundated with all manner of screens nowadays, nothing can replace some well-earned local knowledge and a trusty gut.

A napkin sketch is usually an inessential piece of design ephemera. When a client requests to keep his, all hell breaks loose.

As a longtime yacht designer, Bill Prince has seen it all. Some of it he can write about; some of it he can’t.

The hullside window divide continues to split boaters. As hullside windows increase in size and abundance, the only place they are still anathema is on sportfishermen.

The author recalls trying to wrangle a pesky catamaran and protect a beloved photographer.

As day-boats continue to grow in size, designer Bill Prince wonders if we’re not far off from the “day-superyacht.”

Bill Prince looks back on 25 years of attending the largest in-water boat show in the world: Ft. Lauderdale.

Are engine rooms in danger of becoming extinct? New and bigger propulsion options are changing the way boats are designed and enjoyed.

The iconic tuna tower’s end comes not with a bang but with a bzzz—drones are steadily gaining ground offshore. Bill Prince explains why.

Thanks in part to the Queen Mary’s paper-thin walls, Bill Prince is forced to take part in a couple’s anniversary celebration.