The best buckles I ever salvaged were some very fine brass ones from Italian made race horse halters...
They had engraved name plates with the horses names and everything...
Back to the topic at hand, I was just of the opinion, or rather assumption, that even in the infancy of the
industrial revolution, gang casting brass buckles was cost competitive to single forging wroght iron buckles...in fact, although Im sure they must exist, in my personal experience, I am not sure that I have ever even seen an antique, striated and truly wroght iron hand forged buckle. Alot of cast steel ones, but that was a later technology I think, lots of cast brass ones...and lots of more modern mild steel contemporary forged ones...isnt there a difference or am I barking up the wrong tree.
Also, if I was a saddler that also made pouches professionally...my buckles would be obtained in bulk I would suppose, and used for the project at hand...saddle, harness, or pouch...let the end user recycle or refurbish as he wants, I would make new stuff with new parts...thats the basic technical difference between a "cobbler" and a saddler or cordwainer I think...so if I were likewise a cobbler, Id do what I could to fix what needed fixing with what was provided at hand...and again, were i a backwoodsman, I would likely just make do.
Just my own ramblings here, great topic...
TCA