I'll start off by saying that is a GREAT second gun, better than my 2nd by far. But why not learn a little along the way.
I wouldn't have cared to tackle that BP either, but you did well with it. You probably could have used a black wood filler of some kind in the pores of the wood, it would have really made the stock warmer, also knock that shine down with some pumice and oil, that will help too. Your thumb piece desperately needs inlet, as does your trigger guard and side plate.
Your wire work is technically pretty good, I probably didn't venture into wire until I had a dozen guns under my belt. But, (there's always a but...) much of the wire starts from no where, artistically it needs tied into something. The polish on your brass gives me a headache. Take that buffing wheel and throw it in the trash can. This stuff needs to be polished by hand, it ain't fun, but that's the way it is.
Keep in mind if you build another jaeger, these aren't big guns. There is no more wood on them than what is required. There is not a jaeger kit or precarve on the market that is in any way correct.
Overall, a great second gun...what's the 3rd going to be?
Thank you for the kind words. I can honestly say that I wouldn't have attempted even a first build it hadn't been for all the folks here that share so generously. The photo-bucket debacle robbed all of us of a great historical repository for a true art form. Some things you just have to see to understand.
Concur with your comments, each of the points you bring up I had considered. The black wood filler-I'd thought that chambers was about the only source and was discontinued. I tried wet sanding (600 grit ) with sealer in an attempt to fill the pores and it just didn't work as well as I liked. Maybe sanding sealer? Anybody?
Agree with the shine, thought I had pumice in the shop but couldn't find it. I did rub back with red scuff pad on one coat, it looked horrible. Put another coat of LMF finish and figured a bit of handling would tone it down.
Agree with the thumb piece. Side plate..hmm, also considered that and felt I'd probably make a hash of it. I freely admit my inletting needs practice. A guy needs to know his limitations The trigger guard was a compromise because of the location of the trigger plate. I would have had to cut some of the guard away to inlet it. As it was, I used screws front and back rather than pins. The sprues? were off center and angled so I cut them off. It didn't occurred to me that I could re-solder them, having not done it before. It wasn't till I read that here, somewhere, that it was solution to my problem Not sure the guard was brass, it was awful hard and didn't bend easily.
Can you expand on the silver wire comment IRT tied to something. I actually struggled with that. It took me 3 x longer to layout the design then it actually took me to inlay it. I'll probably start using smaller wire in off shoot branches...I'm getting comfortable with the wire.
LOL on the brass, I agree. I started with a brushed finish, like on the nose cap and butt-plate and it just completely changed the whole motif/appearance/effect. I actually buffed it, then brushed it, a few times and decided the shine would fade. The rifle is really only 2 days old, I finished it Sunday night.
Agree on the wood. I kept wanting to take off more, the whole thing felt....beefy. I was somewhat constrained by the buttplate finial. The original was .65 cal, and I had only had about 6 photos in Shumway's book to judge by. All the rest of the examples in the book were all over the place.
Sourcing all the parts can be a chore. The side plate I really wanted was discontinued due to foundry issues. yada yada on and on.
3rd project? mmm. Briefly toyed with the Brown Bess, but the idea shooting a .775 ball makes my spine cringe,
I like the technical challenge and uniqueness of a Ferguson, but not sure my skills are at that level yet.
Frankly, I'm open to recommendations. What say you all? What should Dan throw his money at
?