Here is a crown done the way Tauylor described it, uisng your thumb- in this case, my thumb. This is the way I do all crowns, even when using a lathe, after cutting the shallow bevel, like shown in Tayor's first picture. This crown, newly machined, is too sharp on the corners of the lands and grooves and is difficult loading a very tight combination. The crown on my 14 bore as pictured, allows easy loading with a pure lead ball only .006" smaller than the bore and a .030" denim patch. The rifing is .012' deep, so you see, I have about .020" compression at teh bottom of the grooves. Just in case you think this combination will deform the ball and cause innacuracy, it still puts them into 1 1/2" at 100 meters and 1 1/2" x 3 1/2" at 200 yards.
Note that the corners at the tops of the lands, and bottoms of the grooves are smoothed, ie: with a gentle angle. I call this a radiused crown. It allows easy loading with tight combinations, combinations that allow unlimited shooting without having to wipe as well as producing the best accuracy a non-target rifle can provide. I have the same crown on every one of my rifles, 2 of which use oversized balls (larger than the bore) and a .018" denim to .020 twill patches.