I’m not thinking it , it lines up exactly with the hole in the hasp and the tide clock would prevent anything else from hooking in it. I’m pretty sure from the reverse shots the all the timber work wasn’t from the warlock.View attachment 1792347
So, are you thinking the (brass?) hook protruding on the left would hook into the hasp slot? I would not assume so, because when the hasp is hooked that way, the door can still swing away from the wall, and not remain fully open (plus the banging in high seas).
Perhaps that is what was done/intended, but it does not fit with what I would consider "reality", which we all know this is not...
Food for thought, I guess. I suspect the brass hook serves some other purpose- perhaps to hold the table up, or... who knows, since it was a modified vessel. Its purpose may have been eliminated in the conversion, but the detail remained?
But thank you for questioning it as it made me test the theory. I took the frame and camera aligned it the best I could But when I dropped my model in it lined up perfectly apart from I'd got the tide clock slightly too low. easy fix.
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