Hi,
Thanks for looking and the compliments. I like doing wire inlay. I get better at it on every project and maybe one day I'll be as good as Ed Wenger or in my wildest fantasy, Jerry H. and Dave Price.
Jerry, the wood for the stock on the gun in the first group of photos is very dense cherry but it is stained to look like aged apple wood. The English rifle is stocked in dense English walnut, which is my favorite wood for carving, inlay, and wire.
Thimble rig, I use precut ribbon and sheet depending on the thicknesses I can purchase. I am mostly using 0.008" thick ribbon but add in 0.006" cut from sheet, and 0.013" ribbon for accents and variation. The inlays are cut from 1/16" thick sheet silver and are held in just by the swelling of the wood. If you notice, the inlays are really tight. I adopted Dave Price's method of placing the inlay on the wood, then tapping it with a hammer to make it indent its outline in the wood, then cut away the indented wood. As long as you are careful about tapping the inlay so it does not bounce, that method works really well. I compress the inlay under a thin flexible metal ruler and tap the ruler with the hammer.
dave