I really enjoy getting to go back now and see examples of some of the really fine work that was going on back in the late 60s and 70s when I was a kid. My dad used to take me to the local muzzleloading shop and the owner would show me his original and contemporary pieces - I remember hearing names like Wallace Gusler, John Bivins, Jack Haugh, Hershel House, etc. He had a few examples of some of their work and it really hooked me. I am just amazed at how these great builders were able to take the limited information resources available back then and turn out such beautiful interpretations. They had to seek out chances to handle and study originals, absorbed the influences and reinterpreted them. Although we now have the internet, and so many more books available as well as chances to see originals at shows, I think that perhaps feeling a bit less "bound" by the constraints that many of us worry about today produced some great art. Wallace's gun has a variety of influences in it but just still screams 1780 Virginia to me, so it conveys a strong sense of what it is supposed to be.
Guy