Mainly I'm talking about the quality of work, not so much the materials, or the patina.
As an example, stitching.
Again I'm not picking on any body in particular, so please don't take anything I write as a personal attack, because it isn't.
If your doin it, the only one you have to make happy is yourself, so peace man. lol
No matter what muzzleloader sites I look at, a lot of the leather work has stitching that is here, and there, and everywhere, no rhyme or reason to why.
I can't believe that everybody that worked with leather, just stitched here and there through the leather.
Even if you sucked when you started, after a few dozen projects, your stitching is bound to improve.
I admit my methods are probably not traditional, but I use an old divider with a piece of leather sinewed into one spot, so the points are always the same distance apart.
I use this tool to scribe around the outside of the project to get an even border, then I use the points to define my stitch sites, then I punch it with an awl, then lock stitch everything together. Easy Peasy
Now the only thing in my method that is not old, is the steel dividers.
I'm guessing I could have pounded a couple of nails in a board to make the same tool.
Wouldn't take much to make everything symmetrical.
A good leathersmith wouldn't need any mechanical assistance, he can see when his stitching is in or out.
I have seen plenty of vintage handstitched items that look like they could have come off of a machine.
So what I'm getting at, is that there had to be craftsman back then making stuff to the best of their abilities.
If you were on the frontier you worked with what you had, but a lot of the stuff that went west was made in the east.
Don't you think that even 200 years ago when the item was new, that you could have had your stitching even and precise?
Maybe nobody cared, I don't have a clue.
Jim