Just did my first rifle build from a Kibler Colonial kit. My instructor was Dan Fruth, this was a week long course at Colonial Homestead Artisan Guild in Millersburg Ohio. This kit can literally be assembled in a day,now having said that you must understand some things. The barrel although beautiful as is, is covered from breech to muzzle with machining marks, and I don't mean some here, some there. I mean from one end to the other, solid, every sixteenth of an inch, all sides. I brought this rifle home unfinished after a 40+ hr week of work and still need to finish draw filling 1 1/2 flats (and I'm leaving the 3 flats on bottom untouched). I have over 6 hrs (more like a full day) just in the buttplate, and it still has small but noticeable pitts, that if I wanted totally removed I would need more time, the trigger guard has about a full day into its cleanup. Sanding, raising the grain, and sanding more, staining, and 1 coat of oil finish on the stock has about a day. I could go on. Again understand that during this course Dan taught me how to build, not just assemble this rifle, but build every rifle I will build from here out. How to measure, cut, file, and polish my pins, (and there's a few). How to inlet, blackening, setting, chiseling, scrapping, identifying the parting line, saving the parting line, keeping the line crisp, adding draft to pieces to be inletted, I could go on and on. I could have just assembled this rifle, threw on a finish that was good enough for the job done and been done with it. But instead I learned how to build this rifle well enough that it could be handed down through my family, and it will look like a decent rifle by those that look at it. It all comes down to what you want to achieve as a finished product, it can be as fine as you like, or as rough as you like, and this Kibler kit is beautiful in the rough, but once you start cleaning it up, and removing the rough, and bringing it to a finish level is amazing. couldn't be happier. I plan on making a separate post with pics soon, hope this help anyone who reads it.