Dave,
I really like the English trade guns.
Do you plan to pursue this project, from a historical standpoint or from a contemporary craftsmanship standpoint? Also, po white or INDN?
Good questions James. Things I had not considered. Though I am looking at what would of been historical correct for a white man I want to use it so it will need to be durable as well. I shot about 30 rounds through the gun on Saturday and plan on using it again next weekend. I plan to shoot shot as well as roundball.
Don't know if I answered your questions or not. Looking forward to continuing this conversation.
DMR
Dave,
If doing period, I would avoid fancy. No linings or pockets or loops for bullet blocks and ball starters.
I would choose a good piece of vegetable calf and make a bag that used a double divider that also served as a welt.
The Lyman bag from Clash of Empires has that feature as well as one Wallace had written about in some older MB articles that could also possibly be quite early.
There is also written documentation for the same design but with cloth and it gives us an insight as to what the divider was used for....
The 2d Virginia Regiment October 12, 1775:
“… Each Company is to draw a sufficient Quantity of Dutch or Russia Drilling to provide Each Soldier with a Shott Pouch with a partition in division in the middle to keep buckshot and bullets separate. Each Soldier to make his own sack and Shot Pouch as near one General Size Pattern as possible…” Thanks JM
Maybe some tooling lines on the strap and around the flap, etc. no binding.
I would keep the horn plain as well.
I guess my idea of proper would be well made items from a harness maker type done in a workman like manner with none of the fancy add-ons that we take as common on a well made pouch today. This was a working item in the day and not artwork. Could have been import (my best guess) or local made by a skilled worker for sale or trade.
It may not win any craftsmanship awards at the show being absent of all the expected bells and whistles but it is a fer piece closer to right in going with that gun.
Jim Mullins, the author of Of Sorts For Provincials and I have been trading research on bags, flasks, horns, etc. for a couple of years. He has a good write up on his blog about a bag very similar. The image I found of the pouch he modeled his after seemed to have a different bottom line to my eye than what Jim used in the demo. I designed a few of mine with a "cleft" in the bottom and dubbed them the "butt bag" profile.
http://ofsortsforprovincials.blogspot.com/2011/03/making-shot-bag-or-pouch-part-1-of-2.htmlhttp://ofsortsforprovincials.blogspot.com/2011/03/making-shot-bag-or-pouch-part-2-of-2.htmlJMHO