Randall, the limiting factor here is what butt plate is available. If you are able or willing to modify or make a plate to fit the correct measurements you can make about any style of rifle fit anyone you want to.
If a stock gets longer and the shape of it must be followed to stay within a style, but the butt plate would then get taller and wider because all butt-stocks are effectively some sort of elongated triangle in shape.
So to answer your question directly, No, I have never been asked to make any style of gun in 35 years that I could not make fit the customer.
One thing to remember is that any old rifle can be copied but it may not fit you. Some are going to have longer or shorter LOPs and also differing drops and cast off. A parallelism would be if we were to make an exact copy of George Washington's coat it would fit a man of the same size and measurements as George Washington, but if you wanted to make one in the same
style as his, you could make one fit a 5 year old girl or anyone you like. Same with rifle stocks.
Style must not be confused with measurements. But any style can be made to fit any shooter.
If you were to gather up 12 different JB Beck originals, 12 Peter Barry originals and 12 Rupp originals you may very well come up with 36 different sets of stock measurements. All of their rifles were hand made so it's likely no 2 were exactly the same. Yet you could pick out which rifles were made by each old master without any problem at all by his style. They all has a style they worked within. It's the same today.
A rifle, when done correctly is a synthesis of all it's parts, which is why it is not desirable to make extreme changes in caliber for the sake of recoil, but that is really not the issue here. Originals with curved narrow butts were not made in "elephant calibers" for the same reason we would not make one that way today.
I made a 62 cal rifle for a giveaway at the Western National Rendezvous in 98 (I think) in the Rupp style and it was not made for a specific man because it was to be raffled off, yet for all it's bore size the rifle was quite nice to shoot. I zeroed it for 75 yards with 125 grains of powder if I recall correctly, and it was spot on. The wide butt took the recoil well and it was not at all unpleasant to fire.
Here are some (lousy) pictures of it. I am not a good photographer.
Rupp 99 2 by
Steve Zihn, on Flickr
Rupp 99 3 by
Steve Zihn, on Flickr
Rupp 99 bottom by
Steve Zihn, on Flickr
Rupp 99 wrist by
Steve Zihn, on Flickr
Rupp 99 by
Steve Zihn, on Flickr
So I believe caliber is a factor to be considered with some rifles with very dished and narrow butt plates, but the Lehigh County style is not hard to make easy to shoot comfortably.
Stock FIT cannot overcome recoil but can help to manage it quite a lot. But the narrower and more dished the butt plate--- the more of a challenge this becomes.