Wow! Thanks for all these neat responses.
First some answers, from last to first questions, then some pictures.
To Ron. She was a (feline) cat of mine, long-named Lucretia. And her nick-name fit my need for one that would span the rudder post more or less symetrically.
To LMSailor #1. I did design her myself, using Excel as my basic computational and drawing tool. (Yes, "drawing". Turns out that, by treating cells as pixels, you can draft and even animate with Excel.) Her lines were traced from a full-keel Herrshof design I saw in a book.
To LMSailor #2. The above is partly the answer your earlier question, too. She took so long to finish because she was a whole soup-to-nuts
development, not just a conventional build. And it wasn't just her hull that I had to develop, it was also her water ballasting system (going from 7,000 lbs to 15,000 lbs on launch, and keeping her still floating on her lines); her mast erection system (I went through four different designs, each taking about a year to build and test, before I found one that satisfied); and her trailering system (large enough to carry LuLu dry, low-slung enough to launch from a 1:7 ramp and get under 14' overpasses, and still light enough to be pick up-towable). The other part to the answer is that I worked the whole project alone and I never quit my day job.
To SlimPickens. Is your reference to a particular kind of German canal boat? I'd love to see a picture if you have one.
To First Jackdaw. Roughly, her rig dimensions are: 150 Genoa @ 20' x 30' = 300 ft2 + Main @ 16' x 30' = 240 ft2. She can also fly a Staysail @ 15' x 25' = 160 ft2. And your right, 540 ft2 is small for a 35 ft boat displacing 15,000 lbs (7,000 lbs is her dry weight, before launch). That's characteristic of sailboats that depend solely on water in their bellies for their heel resistance. She's very fine (max beam over half her length aft) which helps. But I also wanted her to be self-righting, so what can I say? She's definitely a lead-sled with her motors off.
Picture #1 LuLu in erectus
Picture #2 Interior shot from cockpit looking forward
Picture #3 Interior of Aft Cabin shot from hatchway steps looking forward
Picture #4 Interior of Aft Cabin shot from mid bulkhead looking aft
Picture #5 Interior of Forward Cabin shot from mid bulkhead looking forward
Brad