Jim there is a big difference between a original and a repro to a collectors no matter how good a persons work is for me it has to be an original
Feltwad
You are missing my point... Whether you prefer originals is not pertinent. Please read my previous post. I was referring to the understanding and appreciation you can only get by making something of equal or very @!*% near equal to what was made in the past. Not to mention the study and research necessary to pull it off. And no, this doesn't mean careful study of pictures. It means dissecting original work as study pieces.
This is just one aspect of gaining an understanding and appreciation of past work, though. There are other ways of learning that compliment this, of course, but this is substantial.
So, to my original point... I question the appreciation and expertise, in general, of those from England today regarding 17th and 18th century guns. A few points regarding this:
Great originals sell for peanuts. Many of these end up in the states.
Anyone who has approached this subject from a scholarly perspective is long dead.
Descriptions from auction houses are weak at best.
No first class modern work recreating this period is being done.
Yes, there are probably some who have authority and expertise, but I've not been too impressed from what I've seen in the last 20 years or so.
But with all this said, debates should be based on individual bits of information and not generalities.
Jim