Myrtle varies a lot--kinda like maple. I've seen curly, feather, crotch, burl, and combinations. Never birdseye except in burl. A LOT of color variation, often in the same stick. Much of the "tourist" stuff sold (especially on the southern Oregon coast) is small turned stuff that has some color to it, but not a lot of figure. The figured stuff, especially in larger (read: usable) sizes is getting very pricey. I've seen single sticks with a lot of figure and color suitable for resawing into veneer with prices nigh $1000 (claro is getting there too). Stockblanks in the several hundred range.
Lengths are getting short. Luthier stuff, etc. Some say that Oregon/California myrtle will be essentially commercially extinct in our lifetimes. At my age, I may croak first though.
A client asking for figured myrtle in the field of a dining tabletop has me researching, and it got me to asking a broker to watch for a suitable stick to restock a gun I've got languishing in the safe--it also wants a lot of other work. When I asked about a highly figured stock blank suitable for a fullstock muzzleloader with a 42" to 48" barrel, he laughed at me and asked how my line of credit is. That question was mostly academic, but I'm looking for a two-piece chunk for an underhammer. Those smaller hunks are still in my budget.
Thanks for the feedback, BTW.