Great work! I see the middle sail is flipped reverse to the other two. Was that actually how it was shown in the plans? The reason I ask is that I completed an Artesania Latina Chinese Junk "Red Dragon", and in it, all the sails orient the same facing side. There's a lot of other differences between the two kits, which makes sense as I'm certain there's likely a thousand different variations of Junks. But the sail orientation is something I'm curious about, and now that I'm re-visiting images of real boats, I see that there are versions in which all the sails have the battens to one side, whereas others have the main sail flipped in relation the fore and aft sails. But I think I've found my answer... it seems that Hong Kong junks had their sails hung to the starboard of the masts, whereas some mainland Chinese junks flipped the center sail to hang off the port side. Here's an interesting document I found that talks about it (and the associated rationale for the difference in sail placement), The sail orientation differences are discussed on page 4.
https://www.junkrigassociation.org/Resources/Documents/The Chinese Sail by Brian Platt (750 Kb) 2Apr07 - 759KB-1.pdf
So it would seem the Amati kit is a mainland China junk, and the Artesania Latina is a Hong Kong variant. Just when I thought a junk was a junk was a junk, I discover this distinction. One of the things I love about this forum is that it always generates surprises and food for thought..
Again, really nice work on your completed junk.