You will sometimes see antiques that have bumped up metal (cold chisel technique) in the dovetails at the rear sight, but don't show bumped up, raised metal at the front sight. But that doesn't necessarily mean that the smith used a different technique for the front sight. Rather, if the tool marks show that he used a cold chisel to cut the angle for the rear sight, then he probably used the same tool to cut the angle for the front sight. He then filed down the raised portion (the raised metal left after bumping up the angle with the chisel) at the front, so as to get the raised metal out of the way so that the blade of the front sight could slide in and mate up properly with the surface of the barrel. (I'm talking about a blade that "hangs over" the base to the front and rear. It is somewhat advantageous for it to fit down against the surface of the barrel, so that it doesn't snag cleaning rags, etc. and get deformed.)
(Just my humble opinion here, of course.)
The sights in the images below are from the same antique rifle. (The rough dimples around the rear sight are because the guy used a smaller punch to set the sight in a little tighter. )
Here's another set that shows the front sight better. In this one, you can see where he used a punch to set in the front sight, as well. But since there was no raised metal, he just punched down the edge of the notch. (That's only one technique. I've seen other antiques where the smith didn't mess with the edges of the notch, but instead used a punch to fuller out the width of the base, so as to lock it into the notch. And then there are some examples that show the work of a very careful old smith who just patiently fitted everything, and didn't seem to need to punch anything.) I guess my point here is to say that the old smiths didn't
necessarily "match the angle " for a perfect fit. In some cases, they seemed to have thought that close enough was good enough.