I've been working on this, my first, step wrist gun and I want to check with those more knowledgeable about my butt architecture. If you recall, I had this funky butt plate and I think it looks fine now that it is installed. I do think I will follow Ed's suggestion of adding some carving or wire inlay in front of it along the comb to stretch it out a little.
First off, at the risk of waking up strangled with Stophel's lederhosen suspenders, I don't want it to look
TOO German.
I've gone back to my Jaeger book, and the chapter in RCA on German pieces to look for ideas on how to "German it up", and those Germans might design nice stuff, but some of their gun architecture is butt ugly to my eye! Maybe it is an acquired taste that I haven't acquired yet.
So, my goal here is to make this look like a generic, German influenced, American built, step wrist critter.
Here is my progress so far. As it currently stands, everything works out pretty good- the trigger guard lays out nicely, cheek piece feels good, and I shortened up the LOP a little to make up for the thick wrist. I haven't installed the trigger yet, so I probably have 1/4 inch or so to play with if needed to move things (like the trigger guard) around. Obviously there is still a lot of extra wood around the lock panels. My panels are drawn oversized and I will thin them up with my final shaping.
I am not real thrilled with look of the side plate (it is not inlet yet), I can drop the comb line a little if you think I need to, and I can move the step back a bit if needed. The wrist currently measures 1 5/8" tall.
Any opinions and suggestions welcomed!
Oh, one final thing- I am going fishing tomorrow so I may not reply till Saturday. I'm not ignoring your help, I am hopefully busy reeling in fish!