Tom, a question; You used the term "organic" to describe early work. I have seen this term applied to gun building before, but even after looking up the word I do not see how it is applied to gunbuilding. Could you amplify on this terminology as it applies to gun work?
Stophel is on the money, especially about not being Tom.
'Organic' is appearance, yes, but it is also feel. How the gun feels in the hand. Consider a bird or a fish. Every shape and contour is for a natural reason. So, too, is a gun.
One area blends into another naturally, flows with seamless purpose and intent. This is why the hardware choice is so critical on a gun, for the hardware actually determines the shape of the stock. The barrel determines the bulk of the gun, the lock dictates the panels ant the depth and breadth of the breech area, how much bend at the wrist. The buttplate determines the bulk of the buttstock. The area between the lock and the buttplate is up for some interpretation, with some constraints posed by your choice of guard: will this be a step toe, fish belly, or straight stocked gun?
I'm rambling again.
But when I say organic, it's the soft, rounded and flowing aspects of the creatures of the earth embodied into the firearm's form. Everything has a purpose on the gun, and it must be in proper relation to its neighboring part and piece and form. All the elements must work together to form the object we know as a gun.
My goal is to make that perfect, flowing object, that has a radiant presence, an object with a life of its own. This might be easy for some builders, but for me, I challenge myself at every one of the thousands of little choices that present themselves before and during a rifle build. I try to tune in to the deep well of the subconscious, the cultural, regional and historical aspects.
Will I ever make that perfect gun? I don't know, or really care. It's the chase that is so fascinating.
I think I just talked myself to death, or I need more coffee.
Tom