Nothing infuriates a Dixon participant more than those words. Around here it is common source of humor and chiding.
Many years ago, when I first got into Kentucky rifles, I read and read, and conversed with the most knowledgeable people in the business, and it is a business as well as a hobby, and there is one discussion that I will never forget. As usual, I shot my big mouth off about some detail and the good Dr. Shumway looked me straight in the face and said, "Just how many originals of that variation have you handled and studied?" Frankly, he stopped me cold, because maybe I had seen 3 or 4, but Doc had seen, measured and photographed maybe 100 of this type. Then he became the professor and set me straight, much to my chagrin. He went on to explain, "Unless you have really studied the originals, in your hand, you don't know what you are really doing as a builder. Pictures go only so far; so do words. There is no substitute to handling and studying the real McCoys.
I have seen some beautiful work over the years...much more fancy than I am capable of producing. I have acquaintances, some friends even, who were machinists. Their skills show in their gun building. I have friends who are jewelers, good builders of jewelery, not just hucksters of other people's stuff.
Their craft expertise shows in their gun building. I could never shine their shoes.
But saying this, some of these same people are working from pictures and words. Their skills are superb, but they have never handled and truly studied the originals.
Anal??? OK I;ll give you anal. Are your bolt heads shaped correctly for a region? You need to know how the original masters made them, then you can copy them. Is your wrist correct, both in shape and size? And your front end wood? A Lancaster gunsmith did the job entirely differently than a Lehigh builder. How do these jobs differ and what is the end result?
Why do we Pennsylvania builders commonly belittle many store bought parts? The all leave something to desire when laid next to the originals.
Details, details...every piece of brass furniture differs from county to county, as do lock placement and sight style. And the architectural dissimilarities are conspicuous because the jobs were done differently.
George Shumway educated me and it was harsh at the time, but he was right. Unless you have a substantial lifetime endeavor in examining the real guns, please don't speak ex officio,like a priest, and assume that you even know what you are talking about, because pictures and words are not enough. And another thing while I am giving a sermon, variations and oddities exist. The moment that you make an absolute statement about old guns, something pops up that forces an honest man to conclude that maybe he does not know everything that he thought he did. Been there many times.
So, what's my point. Go ahead. Build guns as you deem appropriate. Above all, enjoy it. But, please, please, don't assume that you know more than a man who has studied thousands or originals, unless you have done so yourself. Pictures and commentary is no substitute to being in the arena of material reality.