1911 grips

ian745

CGN Regular
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Courtenay BC
ok, so here goes, just picked up a Kimber stainless classic2 in 45, my dream pistol (haters can go suck a Glock..lol), anyways, in looking around i find most grips that i like are out of country, is there Canadian made ones?, or where is everyone getting their grips from, i just like to change things up from time to time, makes it like a new pistol.lol
 
Gotta say I love my g10 grips on my 1911....great for fit and function...for looks I’m a fan of pachmeyer American legend..
 
If you have any woodworking abilities 1911 grips are pretty simple to make, I made these ebony ones with pretty much hand tools. The only power tools I used were a drill press to make and countersink the screw holes and an orbital sander to finish the rough sanding after I was done shaping with hand files, I cut them out with a hand saw and shaped them with files. After I was done I oil sanded them with wet dry auto sand paper, oiled them with blo and gave them a couple coats of furniture wax. The hardest part is not drilling the countersink holes to deep, you want the screws to be flush.

8j9Ltcc.jpg

McaGrgn.jpg
 
ok, so here goes, just picked up a Kimber stainless classic2 in 45, my dream pistol (haters can go suck a Glock..lol), anyways, in looking around i find most grips that i like are out of country, is there Canadian made ones?, or where is everyone getting their grips from, i just like to change things up from time to time, makes it like a new pistol.lol

I've scored 1911 grips from all over the place.... gun shows, the EE here, from retail stores both here & in the USA, etc....

I even have a set of Kimber "pepper" grips I got off the EE here.... I put them on a "project" 1911 I also scored off the EE....

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If you have any woodworking abilities 1911 grips are pretty simple to make, I made these ebony ones with pretty much hand tools. The only power tools I used were a drill press to make and countersink the screw holes and an orbital sander to finish the rough sanding after I was done shaping with hand files, I cut them out with a hand saw and shaped them with files. After I was done I oil sanded them with wet dry auto sand paper, oiled them with blo and gave them a couple coats of furniture wax. The hardest part is not drilling the countersink holes to deep, you want the screws to be flush.

8j9Ltcc.jpg

McaGrgn.jpg

those sure look nice, sadly , the joys of condo life and a very active strata council that kinda hates me as it is, i dont dare fire up the sander and saw here haha, , i`ll take a look at some of the other brands listed and see what i can see, thanks all!
 
I’m a big fan of VZs...all of my recent 1911s have worn them. I order straight from the US usually (unless a Canadian dealer has the specific ones I’m after).
 
Awesome job on those 1911 grips! :cool:

Thanks, I want to revisit my second grip project. I started making a set of tt-33 grips out of the remainder of the ebony but it fell by the wayside, I find the tt-33 too narrow in my hands.


those sure look nice, sadly , the joys of condo life and a very active strata council that kinda hates me as it is, i dont dare fire up the sander and saw here haha, , i`ll take a look at some of the other brands listed and see what i can see, thanks all!

Take a look at http://marschalgrips.com they have some interesting wood options for a wide range of pistols.
 
VZ is the place to start your search. <https://vzgrips.com/pistol-grips/1911>

My favorite model is their slim version of the classic double diamond in black G-10. <https://vzgrips.com/pistol-grips/1911/double-diamond/double-diamond-black-g10>

You can order them however you'd like, and that's exactly how they'll come. They're perfect.
 
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