Thanks for all the comments guys, it is appreciated, and I see a lot of what you are saying.
Dave, thanks for the comments on the entry pipe design. I had originally planned for it to be longer, as that seemed right. Then, as I drew it, it kept getting shorter. I looked at some pictures of originals, and am sure you are right. Will fix it.
Jerry, the tang carving was meant to be reminiscent of a fleur-de-lis. Obviously ( I hope) I only drew the one side of it. Wanted to get the shape of the side leaf, then copy that for the other side. References for what I was going for would be in the style of RCA #43, 66, 67, simplified 69, or 70.
The carving behind the cheekpiece is meant to be similar to the Dickert gun on the KRA Early Moravian guns cd, and/or inspired by the similar patterns on RCA 66, 67, 70, or even the Albrecht gun on that same KRA CD.
Wish I could just post the photos to make discussion easier, but I certainly respect why we don't post copyrighted material.
PPatch,
Thank you, I think I will make the beavertails a bit fatter. I don't like the super fat ones, but these could certainly be bigger. I think I may move them closer to the termination of the side plate/lock panel as well, so they don't appear to "hanging" off the edge as much.
You're right, the upper edge of the forward volute on the cheek side carving needs more definition. I had thought that the curve of the cheek piece flowing towards the corner of the butt plate would define it better, and see that effect on several examples. In this case, it doesn't do a good job of that. Looking at a few pictures of originals, I see a way to fix that.
If it helps, to be more precise, I am going for early, pre-revolution Lancaster area designs, with a possible influence from Christian's Spring (fictional CS apprentice moving to Lancaster?? Like Albrecht did to Lititz? Anyway, you get the idea). I don't want to go too ornate, as my carving skills probably won't support that.
I'll post my second drafts when I can. Takes me a long time to draw, and shop time is limited.
thank you,
Norm