There are many ways to skin a cat, and to carve a long rifle.
There is the actual carving, and yours is very good, albeit it appears troubled with some of the curves. Know your design and layout are very good. This will finish up very nice. First attempt? Wow, this is incredible. I suspect this won't be your last.
Then there is the backgrounding. A smooth background no one pays attention to, as all you see is the carving. A rough background will draw attention away from the carving, so in some ways, it's as important as the carving.
You have by now read a half dozen methods different builders use to background. There may be a 'right way' to do it, but I'm not sure what that is, as I work in a hole in the ground, not in the middle of PA rifle country, never apprenticed, just learned from the ALR and my own sweat and blood.
I use small rifflers and rasps to flatten the background, then scrape with various mini-scrapers and knives to get the background plane smooth.
Regrards,
Tom
These are the little tools I use to stab around my carving designs. I only push them in about 1/32" deep.
To traverse a broad curve, I 'inch along' by rolling the stab tool.
Then a use a shallow gouge, only 3/16" wide, to pare across the grain to bring the background down around the carving.
After the surface is gouged down, I flatten with mini rasps and scrapers. Always, always, roll your work in slanting light to find the lumps, bumps and hollows.
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