Rich,
I guess you are correct. I have never really followed a "School" but just used the "schools" to help create my designs over the past 40 year's!
I really admire how some of the builders here can build a rifle to the appropriate School!
Jim
You jest, Jim. Your Vienna rifles are very true.
But, following rules across all types of rifles kind of makes them all look the same somehow and that is one critique I’ve heard of the formulaic and rule-based approach in Alexander’s book. Some don’t want a Lehigh or Bucks County or Lancaster or Reading rifle to look the same in some inexplicable way. But sometimes they do.
A good many originals break many rules.
The Musicians rifle has less than half the barrel exposed from what I see. It’s masterful.
Bucks County rifles are often flatter in the tang area and the edge of the sideplate molding is sometimes above the edge of the side flat of the barrel. Same for some Lehigh guns. And oh my goodness let’s not even start on later North Carolina or Tennessee mountain rifles. If one tried to follow rules and formulas, all flavor would be lost completely.
Wrist length varies widely; Christians Spring pretty short and Bucks County very long, but devotees of the Golden Mean will find a way for both to fit the formula somehow.
And so on.