All the talk about mistakes in originals that need to be corrected in copies strikes me as strange. If you are going to copy for documentary purposes, what you think about the fore-end shaping, the lock panels, the butt-plate, etc., is completely irrelevant. To take a respected original with the expressed intent of copying it and to "improve" it with your vision of how things should be -- a vision that is necessarily a product of your times -- serves no purpose but to pander to the taste of the times and indulge your own sense of self-importance.
If I correct the original maker's work while I make my copy, I won't have a copy anymore.
Many of the products of today's "super-builders" will look like bad 70's hair styles in an amazingly short time. To so interpret an actual artifact in this fashion and call it a copy is the height of self-indulgence and parasitism: Self-indulgence because you feel that you can improve an existing artifact and parasitism because the basis of the copy's significance is not what what you have done but the importance of the original.
I don't like the idea of my work going out of fashion in a decade or less. I make a fair number of gambles when I make a gun, make design elements that never existed, but 'might have', or at the very least, I satisfy my creative urges. I would break down in tears if I knew all my work was to end up in the closet with the platform shoes and bellbottom trousers.
Actually, I'm not scared at all that my work will go out of fashion. It's good, solid work, it's creative. It's not for everyone. I'm also not telling everyone that this is 'the right way' to do things. It's
my way, and that's what I like about this rifle building.
BGF, excellent thought on an 'improved' copy devaluing the original, pointing out its flaws by doing the 'troubled areas' better. That would be arrogance, fo' sho'. But if I were to make a copy, and started to say to myself that 'I would like to make this detail in my own way', that is not arrogance, just some creativity showing up. At that point the gun ceases to be a copy.
Reading this thread, one gets the impression that many builders today are incapable of reasonable copies, due to being such unbound creative geniuses. Time will tell whether their original works are displayed beside Shroyers and Youngs or pointed to as quaint arts and crafts projects or bad investments from the early part of the second millenium. I expect, however, that they hope their original works, should they achieve the status of greatness and be copied for documentary purposes be copied as precisely as possible in the future, not improved on according to the fashion of the day.
Ouch. That kind of stung. I'll see if I get over my red-eye, ground pawing anger and make some sense of the discussion. While I resent the slap, there is also a lot of truth to what you say. Maybe that is why the sting?
If we are so incapable, then why bother at all? Maybe we should turn to crochet? No, there is original crochet work that we might dishonor by copying. Or how about oil painting, wait, same problem... darn! There is nothing we can do without being in danger of going out of fashion or dishonoring original work.
Maybe we could change our attitude instead?
To me, to copy, is to learn. To attempt to copy faithfully an artifact is as close as you can get to having the master looking over your shoulder. There is something sacred about this process; it requires complete honesty with yourself and you must tune all your faculties of observation to the highest pitch. You must bring your critical eye into the greatest focus.
If my work goes out of fashion, oh, well. I had my rewards by building it. I get my ya-ya's out by building, by dreaming, by watching the gun slowly appear before my eyes. I don't get my joy by watching my work's value increase. For every man that says 'bad copy', there is another who says 'hey, that's a really cool rifle'. So I am confused by this talk that has no seeming answer.
There is indeed 'trouble with copies', but I think the real trouble is personal. And the
most trouble comes from the way your work is presented to the public, to the customer.
Be honest with your self and your customers, and the problems with copies evaporates.
Happy Labor Day, everyone.
Tom