This might be the case except for the signed "poor boy" I made in the 60s being "found in a cabin in eastern Kentucky" and two antique dealers telling the buyer it was a rev war gun... Even though it obviously had a modern barrel on it. It sure as $#*! was not a high end gun.
You can dance around this all you want it still has a smell to it.
If YOU were the one hung out to dry by a faked rifle or tea kettle (yeah folks) or knife would YOU be as nonchalant?
Dan - you just don't get it. You're own words show how the unscrupulous will take ANYTHING and try to fake it, so how does Eric or anyone else making an aged piece promote that or cause it to smell?
It may make it easier for the unscurpuloous, but not making it won't stop them at all. Heck I've even seen RUGER six guns being sold as "antiques"........
And no I'm not non-chalant at all since I've been on both ends of the stick. I've been "victimized" so to speak both as a buyer and a maker. On the first it was MY FAULT since I was the one who had not studied enought o be taken in by what was to the better educated an obvious fake. As a maker I have had my goods touted as being originals by others, both stuff I had aged and stuff that was sold looking new.
While I believe we as makers have an obligation to help prevent fraud we can only do so much - such as clearly marking our items as being made by whom, when, etc. - personally I also document everything I make with photos, dates, etc., but again that can only be taken so far and it can of course be done in an unobtrustive manner. Frankly ANYONE who starts out buying anything without the proper education is just plain stupid and while I believe that we can and should educate when and where possible, IT IS NOT our obligation to be nannies to those who choose not to study the subject first. The Romans said it many years ago caveat emptor.......
Rich - you have absolutely NO REASON to apologize, it was a well thought out and measured post.......
And Dan - you have the right to your OPINION, but please let's all keep it civil.......border line accusations of any type are not acceptable to this site
I accused no one, everything I wrote has happened and I was thinking of specific instances and it does stink. Its is not limited to guns, or MLs.
It never crossed my mind when I modified, which was not antiqued BTW, the Borchardt that I was making a fake. It simply never occurred to me. So I can understand how it can happen.
I never dreamed that the flintlock rifle I made for a friend in the late 60s that was a "new" rifle would later be sold as an original. I found out because it had my name on the barrel and I was contacted by a third party. I do KNOW people who are expert agers who have gotten caught selling faked Sharps rifles created out of parts. I KNOW someone who put himself through college selling faked antiques that he made.
*But I know of no such instances concerning anyone who posts here.*
If I have insulted anyone here or somehow my posts were taken as a personal affront I apologize. But people need to understand that there is a "dark side" to selling antiqued firearms no matter the builders intent.
I UNDERSTAND people wanting to have gun/equipment that looks used. What I don't understand is why they don't simply USE them.
What I am attempting to point out here is just what you stated, people have to be careful. The makers as well as the buyers. When someone makes a rifle aged so that it cannot be easily told from an original, signed or not, its just a hare's breath from a fake. Regardless of the original motivation.
I posted as I did to try to point out that not all gunsmiths that do "aging" are doing so to make the gun for some re-enactor. They are doing it for the "trade" to the point of spurious documents.
I know its impossible to prevent.
I know there is a sucker born every minute.
The examples of firearms fakery are endless. Whole factories were in operation in foreign countries making fake Colt revolvers for retail sale, fully marked, in the late 1800s.
From where I stand I see you as not "getting it".
I can't see making it easier by doing all the aging work for the unscrupulous.
Dan