Hi,
Fun day working on this rifle. The grunt stuff is done and now the fun stuff, albeit not a lot of it. Some John Hills guns and many New England guns have double line borders along the barrel channel and ramrod groove. I think the inspiration was from better quality French guns. Sometimes the border is a pair of raised beads as on this New England fowler.
Hills just cut incised lines. I cannot tell if he did this on his rifles but the famous "Rufus Greene" fowler made during the same time period has them. I decided to use the decorative device on this rifle. The shaping of the fore stock must be finished first and the surface as even and true as possible, otherwise the lines will look rough, wobbly, and uneven. I use an old marking gauge I inherited that was my great great great grandfather's. His name was E. E. Muschlitz and he grew up and was trained as a carpenter and joiner in Nazareth, PA. He moved to Brooklyn, NY and built many of the famous "Brooklyn Brownstone" homes in the late 1800s. Anyway, I deeply scribe the main line.
Then I deepen the line using a long single line checkering tool made in England.
Then I use a 60 degree skip line checkering tool (16 lines/inch spacing) to cut the parallel lines.
The result is very pleasing. I go over the top lines of each pair with a 90 degree cutter so the end result when stained will be a "thick and thin" decorative border.
Next up is outlining carving around the barrel tang and removing the background. Hills usually carved a simple shape that sometimes looks like a shell and other times a round fan. It is sometimes hard to determine what he meant it to be. I created a design that mimics Hills' work but is a little more refined and unambiguous.
I stab the edges in with small flat chisels.
Then use small skew chisels and riffler files to remove and smooth the background and clean up the edges.
I leave it here until after I have whiskered the stock in preparation for final finish and staining. After whiskering, I will cut in the details in the carving. This kind of design is found on so many New England guns. I call it the "potted plant on a pedestal" design. Some leafy or radiant shape at the end of straight austere borders along the barrel tang. It is not very imaginative but it is effective decoration. Next up, the wrist plate and finishing the stock.
dave