I'm putting the final touches on my pattern for a Maryland build in which I'm trying to come up with a compilation of Christian Hawken's style over his 40'ish year career.
I have eight original examples plus the fine contemporary work of Bill Shipman which I have been using to pick features that I want to incorporate into my rifle.
Anyhow, I have run across one original that seems to depart from Christians style and I can't quite figure where to place it in his building timeline.
The rifle is in the possession of the Cody museum.
The examples I have generally follow the Maryland architecture as far as the "lines" go - most notably the very straight comb line. The rifle in question shows a very notable arc, not to the degree of a roman nose, but certainly leaning that way more than a straight comb.
And, it has a domed lid metal patch box, but with numerous piercings which would tend to indicate it came later, rather than earlier in his (solo) career which began at/about 1778.
So my "history question" is - was there a particular period where a domed lid metal patchbox was prevalent??
On the opinion side of things - why would a builder depart from their normal architecture sometime in the middle of the career and then go back to what they have been more typically doing?
Just to try it? - perhaps influence from their master that they decided to revisit? - request of a customer (perhaps most likely)?
Here is a pic with four examples of what I'm asking about - the third rifle is the one that doesn't seem to fit the progression of work in terms of architecture.