If it wasn't for men like Royland Southgate keeping this craft alive we would not be where we are today with gun building .They inspired the study of builders of the past and that is why we see the guns we see today. If you look at the antique rifles not many were perfect ether.
Ephraim
Yes, there are original rifles that are clunky and poorly formed. But why would anyone actually COPY one? For all we know they are restocks or rifles stocked by someone who worked on muskets during the rev-war "rush" and then thought he was a gun stocker afterwards and made a few guns.
Southgate made guns that were functional but he apparently either had no eye for line or did not care.
Every gun I make as some error of some sort that I don't care much for. But I don't set out to recreate errors.
While Southgate was making guns there were others making rifles with far nicer lines etc etc. So keeping the craft alive while making guns with poor lines is not a bell ringer for me. This said there appear to be people who intentionally make very ugly guns, far worse than Southgate's work, then people will tell them how nice they are. Rifles of this sort appear with disgusting regularity on the "blog" and most people know what I am talking about, or should.
Its like comparing a nicely formed wheel thrown teapot or pitcher with some ceramic "art" that looks like Dog @#$%/!! with sticks stuck in it that appear on the covers of ceramics art magazines on a regular basis. Rifles or teapots ugly is ugly.
Dan