Rich N,
Just want to make sure everyone knows it was Mark Elliot, with his good eyes, who correctly noted it was Iron Gall Ink. Here is one of many links on it.
http://irongallink.org/igi_index8f4d.htmlAs to “artificial graining,” I have forgotten the French Term for it that I first learned when visiting Andrew Jackson’s “The Hermitage” outside Nashville, TN in the early 80’s. On the tour, I was really surprised at how massive the bedposts and other walnut furniture was, but also how much of the interior woodwork had so much figure in it. The tour guide explained Jackson had paid for a French Artist to come to Nashville and artificial grain so much of the woodwork as it was then “in style.” I was very surprised at that because paying someone to come from France to do the work seems like it would have been so much more expensive than selecting well figured wood locally or at least in Tenn. I am afraid I don’t remember the time period this was done, though I seem to recall the 1820’s or 30’s.
I bring up the artificial graining at The Hermitage because it was so expertly done. My Paternal Grandpa kept a LOT of walnut at home to make furniture, so I grew up looking at a lot of it and of course the furniture he made from it. I looked at a LOT of the artificial graining done at The Hermitage and I have to say it would have fooled even some very knowledgeable “wood people.” The Tour Guide did not know much about how the work was done, but the graining was often so tiny that it had to have been done using fine artist’s brushes and perhaps at times only one or two hairs of the brush. I do remember mention of a brush called a “Mottler,” as a very specialized tool for that work. As I understand it, in the 19th century this work was done normally by various brushes that were called “tools” at the time.
The artificial graining on this rifle looks like it may have been applied using rags instead of brushes due to the many blotches on it. Or it may have been applied with a brush in a heavy handed manner. It is nowhere near the quality of artificial graining I saw at The Hermitage. I may be going out on a limb here, but it looks like the quality of the graining does not match the quality of the rifle? I wonder if the artificial graining was added by a previous owner after he got the gun from the gunsmith?
Gus