Thanks, rbf.
It certainly looks better than it did.
That said it would stick out like a gold sequined frock if I took it deer hunting now and something has to be done about that.
I could get the stainless bbl bead blasted to remove the glare but the receiver is normal steel which has been bead blasted and heavily blued and I don't want to risk the blue being damaged when they blast the bbl.
So I'll more likely hit the bbl with a matt black ceramic paint usually used for exhausts; the hotter it gets the tougher it gets.
And I'd like to camo the stock with Krylon as it is a little rough and has some bedding compound visible around the action.
A guy referred me to this site and I reckon the pattern looks really good:
http://www.scribd.com/doc/6285685/How-to-Paint-Your-Rifle-Digital-Camouflage
Talking of bubbas and sporterising, if this rifle hadn't have already been so bad I would've stuck with the original bbl and other bits, returned it to some new OG timber from Boyds and simply gone a "Stalingrad sniper" look which I personally think looks great.
But it was pretty far gone and only cost me AUD$125(CAD$113)......try and get a proper German M98 action for that!
And I couldn't say I did the work on this or that it was cheap.
It started out as an attempt to build an inexpensive deer rifle and, well, blew out.

I did the sums the other day and I worked out that I've spent close to AUD$1200 on this rifle!!

In all honesty I could've bought a CZ in this cal if I'd known how much it was going to set me back.
I even added everything up before the new bbl, trigger, bolt handle and bedding job (just over AUD$800) to see if there were new rifles on the market in 8x57 that were around that price or even up to $950, like say the T3, but there weren't.
So what I have is a 8x57 rifle with good parts that is cheaper than anything else in this chambering.
It was a bit of a lesson for me and in future I'll definitely add up the entire cost before embarking on a custom rifle project as there are always unexpected costs.
But the outcome was good, mostly because I bit the bullet (for want of a better expression) and forked out for good quality components in the end.