I have serious doubts about any decorations on a Golden Hind model.
The truth is that we know next to nothing about this ship. Nobody has ever found a decent contemporary picture of her. The Revell kit clearly is based on the plans in a book by a German ship modeler Whose name I've forgotten) that was published in the 1940s.
We have her approximate dimensions, and we know she was originally named Pelican. (The pelican, a big bird that wraps its wings around its brood, was a fairly common symbol for Queen Elizabeth I.) There's ONE brief reference in ONE contemporary document to the effect that, at sea somewhere in the Caribbean, Drake renamed her Golden Hind. (The golden hind was a heraldic symbol on the coat of arms of one of the expedition's wealthy patrons.) At least one modern scholar questions whether the name change actually happened.
Maybe she originally had a pelican for a figurehead. And heaven only knows what was painted or carved on her transom. In any case, it seems highly unlikely that a skilled carver made her a new figurehead or carved royal arms for her transom. If he did, it seems even less likely that the carvings matched the superb quality of those in the Revell/Heller kit.
Part of me thinks it would be most accurate to trash the figurehead and scrape the ornament off the transom. But they're so beautiful....
Youth, talent, hard work, and enthusiasm are no match for old age and treachery.