I am right now reading a book called Gunsmithing Kinks that I got from Brownell's. The book is from the late '60s
In it, it talks a lot about different ways to trick out a wooden stock, such as inlayed designs, contrasting fore-end caps, spacers between the main stock and the fore-end, etc.
I remember seeing a lot of this stuff in the early '70s, when I first started getting interested in guns, as a kid.
I don't see it any more at all. Is it like shag carpet? A fad that came and went, none too soon?
I don't really care for it much myself, but some examples are kind of nice.
How do you guys feel about this stuff?
If I get into gunsmithing in a big way, I might try doing up one, just as a learning excersize.
In it, it talks a lot about different ways to trick out a wooden stock, such as inlayed designs, contrasting fore-end caps, spacers between the main stock and the fore-end, etc.
I remember seeing a lot of this stuff in the early '70s, when I first started getting interested in guns, as a kid.
I don't see it any more at all. Is it like shag carpet? A fad that came and went, none too soon?
I don't really care for it much myself, but some examples are kind of nice.
How do you guys feel about this stuff?
If I get into gunsmithing in a big way, I might try doing up one, just as a learning excersize.