LynnC,
This was my first one so it was a lot of "learn by doing". I used Mike Brook's tutorial that has been previously discussed as a guide for the installation. As far as shaping the but prior to inletting and forging in place, I took the general shape of the butt from the shape of an original Type G butt plate that belongs to Jack Brooks. Here are some photos of the original plate.
The next two pics are of the pre-shaped butt.
I made a tracing of the original buttplate on paper, making it flat by tracing the finial first, then rolled it to the butt portion and tracing that next. I transferred the tracing to the brass sheet with carbon paper and pencil and cut it out with a jeweler's saw and cleaned it up with a file. At that point I laid the blank on another sheet of brass and scribed around it so I could cut out a template for future use. I thoroughly annealed the brass plate.
I took the buttplate, still flat, drilled a small pilot hole where the top nail went, and eyeballed where I thought the metal would mate up to the wood transition of comb to butt as I bent it down. When I was happy with the positioning, I marked thru the hole on the stock, drilled a pilot in the wood and put a small wood screw in the preliminary "nail" hole. I scribed around the finial with a sharp scribe and inlet the finial to the point where the bend should start. Then I started the somewhat tedious process of bending the plate to the curvature of the stock, bending a few millimeters, scribing, inletting, tapping to shape a bit with a nylon teardrop mallet, repeating the process until I had the 90 degree bend finished. I removed the plate several times and annealed it a couple of times during this process to keep it malleable.
The butt portion I just hammered it to fit the shape of the wood butt. adding square nails to secure it as I progressed down towards the toe. All that was left was a little cleanup with a file and engraving.
The square nails were hand cut from 1/8" square steel stock.
The process sounds tedious but it really went fairly quickly as the 1/16" brass sheet was quite workable when annealed. I purchased two sizes of teardrop mallets from Harbor Freight on sale for a few bucks apiece and they have been great for working brass.
Sorry for the length of the post, I hope it helps explain how I did the buttplate.