Mr. Getz,
I have been shooting flintlock guns and reeancting for 40 years. I have never met you, been by your table at the CLA many times. I have owned guns by many well known makers. While I admire "high art" guns, bags and horns I realized that these items were not, for the most part, carried by the early hunters, as they could not afford them, I admire the "real deal" items even more. I want my gear to represent what was carried and made for frontier use.
I think you and other leaders of the CLA and other groups are missing a very important point. " High art" guns, bags, horns, etc are not affordable to most folks. I am worried that you and others are sending a message to young, just getting started, people and others in our sport that in order to be correct or ACCEPTED they must spend large quantities of money, to have the very best. What is the very best? I feel that an early, plain gun, bag represents skill just as much as a highly decorated item. In fact I think high art is in one's ability to recreate what was really used and make it look and feel right.
Jack Hubbard and others make bags, that are not aged, but made in the fashion of the frontier with materials and tools that were accesable to them. Why would a frontiersman travel 500 to 600 miles to Salem, Richmond, or Charlestown to buy a highly tooled bag when he could make one himself or his neighbor could, right on the spot?
Has the CLA and other groups become ladder climbers, those on the top and then the rest of us? I hope not!!!