Hi Folks,
Thanks again. I appreciate the comments, thoughts, and advice. Dave, that is great wisdom and is exactly the reason I struggle making a bench copy of any gun. Sometimes I set out to closely copy an original but always end up making changes that improve it in my eyes. When I built my Star of Bethlehem rifle that was closely inspired by RCA 52, I got an e-mail from David Hansen urging me to consider copying the original as a tribute to the original maker. I just did not like the crude incised carving on the original so I created my own design that showed similar design elements, was consistent with the time and place but was my own. Getting back to the patch box. My inclination is to modify and refine the engraving a bit. By that I mean, I would redesign the lid engraving to be less busy and florid, smooth the curves, and add some shading. Note that there is no shading at all in the engraving, just outlines. I would also consider redesigning the tulip. Shading creates an issue, however, because unless I do it very sparingly and in the right way, I will alter the rustic character of the engraving completely. The kind of cross-hatched shading you see in Schipper's book or on bank notes would not be appropriate. I have never seen an 18th century long rifle with that kind of engraving style. Shading was accomplished by deep, wide cuts rather than cross hatching. Even high quality engraving on English guns at that time showed sparing use of any cross hatching for shading. When they wanted a deep shadow, like in the depth of the curl of a volute, they cut deep and sometimes converging straight lines into the dark spot. Often so many lines that depth was actually cut in relief. Sometimes they simply cut deep with a round bottomed graver, which is also how I think J. P. Beck added depth to his lightly cut designs. Anyway, I appreciate your thoughts and ideas. Again my objective is to engrave the patch box in a manner consistent with the time and place but not necessarily a copy. Getting into the weeds like this is the reason I love building these guns.
dave