ted Your first gun, excited and anxious to get it done, right. Well that will cause you to make mistakes. Finnish each part of the gun before you move on to the next. With said lets start over. The barrel looks canted get it level in the stock, it is very important that is. If left like it is it will cause the lock plate to kick out at the bottom. Now with that done, lets go back to the lock. Put some inleting black on the bolster of the lock, place it back in the stock, press it against the barrel. Now take it back out, the bolster MUST make full contact with the barrel, if it dose not, reinlet lock. It may be hard to believe how important this is, but this effects the architecture of the hole gun. GET IT RIGHT. Now if the barrel was canted, you should have had to reinlet the lower part of the lockplate. Check your bolster again for full contact, VERY INPORTANT. The wood outside the lockplate should be flat, this is the face of the molding. Ok, now draw your molding around the lock, it should be no more than 3/16 of an inch wide above an below the lockplate ( I'm not talking about in front or to the rear of the plate, look at some pic's) leave out the beaver tail for now, that is a different molding. Lets start on the under side of the stock where you have plenty of wood to work with, this will get you use to doing this part of the job, before you do the area above the lock where you have less wood to work with. With the line drawed for the lock molding, now draw another line 3/16 in. out to the side of the trigger plate, extend this line on out so it is as long as the lock molding line. With rasps and files, remove the wood between the two lines, file this area flat, yes flat, BUT stay between the lines. As you remove wood here you will notice the closer you get to the front and rear of the lock molding you won't be able to flatten the wood, that's good. Now with that area flat go back to the top, draw a line about 1/8 in. out along the tang. Same thing, file the wood flat between the lines, DO NOT file past the lines. There should be no hump of wood in back of the moldings in these areas, like in the first pic. The only place there is wood in back of the molding is the short area in front and rear of the lock. Now shape molding to the rear and front area using round files and chisels. Then carve the beaver tail, this will set lower than the lock molding and about 1/32 in above the wrist. If something happens that your lock is to high above the wood you can file off some of the bolster, be careful and TAKE YOUR TIME. You will do allot better job, RIGHT GUYS Good Luck. AL