Drawings? we ain't got no stinking drawings
This was one we built for Bass Pro Shops two or three years ago so they could sell tee shirts out of it. I'm pretty sure it has zero rocker fore and aft.
It's one of our "by hand and by eye" builds and I don't remember the exact details - maybe friend Keith has a better rememberer than me
Anyway, here's some guidelines
I think the transom tilted in 5 to 10 degrees and had a side flare of about 20 degrees. Maximum side flare was close to 35 degrees at midship. Cutback at the bottom of the stem is 8 or 9 on 12.
We typically build with jigs - see "something different" thread in pirogue section back in april of last year.
I would build a jig that matched the transom size I wanted and build two more jigs with about a 30 or 32 degree flare. With the sides upside down, clamp the back ends of the sides in the transom jig and wrap the sides around the other two jigs and temporarily bring the front ends of the sides together. Start off with each inner jig about 2 feet from the centerline. If you're lucky you'll hit what you want dead on, but in reality you'll have to reposition the two jigs up or down until you get the bottom width you want and closer or farther from the centerline to get the maximum side flare you want. Now turn the whole assembly over and scribe a line around the outside parallel to the table or floor that it's sitting on. The distance of each end above that horizontal line is the rocker that you'd have if you cut the sides to that line. Tilt the assembly fore and aft and raise or lower the level of the line until you get the fore and aft rocker that you want. For zero rocker, you'll have the line just touch the bottom of the stem and bottom of the transom. Somewhat different if you want some rocker, but that's another lesson. Later, when you disassemble this line will be an arc.
That gets you the botom cut. For the top cut, get youself a flexible strip of wood and position it wherever and in whatever shape you find pleasing for the shear line. Draw that line. You just need to draw on one side since your two sides will be cut the same. Disassemble everything and cut the lines.
I know this seems like a lot of work but once you get started it's really not that bad and you end up with a boat that is exactly the shape you want.
If you do this at half scale with cheap plywood, it's really easy, just ask Beekeeper.