My earlier list of reputable wood ship kit manufacturers probably should have included A.J. Fisher. It's an extremely old firm, dating back at least to the 1940s. (Probably earlier than that; does any Forum member happen to know when AJF was founded?) The company has been dormant for several years, but has been resurrected quite recently through the intervention of new owners. Though I haven't seen any of the new products in the flesh, I'm confident that they'll be excellent.
The comments that Forum members have offered regarding those hideously expensive continental European plank-on-bulkhead kits certainly ring true according to my experience. We've thrashed this topic out in this Forum before; I fear some of my comments may have raised some hackles. As I mentioned earlier, I know how dangerous it is to generalize about such things. I'm certain there's a considerable range of quality among these...things. It's equally true that people build models for lots of different reasons, and with lots of different priorities. Those people certainly have every right in the world to buy those...things, and if they provide pleasure and satisfaction to the purchasers that's great. Personally, I have yet to see a Mamoli, Mantua, Corel, Amati, or Artesania Latina kit that I'd consider worth carrying home from the hobby shop.
What does rankle me is the damage that, I'm convinced, those kits have done - and continue to do - to the hobby of ship modeling. We've heard from several folks who've started such kits but never finished them. Anybody who's ever worked in a hobby shop knows that the vast, vast majority of those kits never get built. The majority of the people who buy them get discouraged, and the hobby shop never sees them again.
When I was working in a hobby shop, I had several standardized pieces of advice for folks who wanted to get into wood ship modeling. (I generally tried to steer them toward the good plastic kits first - but few of those are left on the market these days.) Not many people listened to me, but here goes.
One - stick with Model Shipways, Fisher, Bluejacket, and Calder kits. (They produce genuine scale models. The continental kits produce...well, something else. I'm not sure what.) Two - for your first effort, pick a relatively small ship in a relatively large scale. (Don't start with a Victory or a Cutty Sark. If you want to demonstrate how much patience you've got, and how much time you're willing to invest in the hobby, start with a cutter or a schooner. You'll have a nice model on your mantle in a few months, and in the process of building it you'll have acquired all sorts of skills, knowledge, and vocabulary that will make the big ship that you're dreaming about go faster and look better.) Three - don't expect your first model to be a world-beating masterpiece. One of the great things about this hobby is that it lasts a lifetime. (If I may be forgiven for making a personal reference here, the year 2006 will be my fiftieth year as a ship model builder. If it were possible to learn everything it takes to build a really good ship model in a year or two, I would have left the hobby a long time ago. I stick with it because I'm constantly learning new things about it - and I like to think I'm getting better at it.) Four - this hobby really involves two activities: model building and reading. Building the models opens the gate to a huge, fascinating literature about maritime/naval history and the history of maritime technology. If you don't like to read, that's not a sin - but you'll be happier in some other hobby.
There's my less-than-two-cents-worth. Sorry to be up on the soapbox.