Hello Mike,
Those images are a direct copy from a book. I definitely didn't make them up. Do you know of any pictures or examples of a specific rifle to copy? Again, I kind of need the direct approach, "Johnny, see this rifle, copy this one". Should I copy Kibler's? I don't understand "study originals" but don't make your own design. I'm new, most of what I hear is "What color does the number four smell like?" As far as carving ability goes... I don't feel qualified to say. I feel I'm pretty good with my hands. I definitely don't want to make another rifle with no carving on it.
If you need resources, there are a bunch of originals right here on this board, free for viewing:
https://americanlongrifles.org/forum/index.php?board=21.0PA sub-board:
https://americanlongrifles.org/forum/index.php?board=111.0Morphy's Auctions have nice pictures too:
https://auctions.morphyauctions.com/auctionresults.aspx?searchvalue=flintlock&searchby=3I'm not entirely new, and agree that a lot of the advice has been frustratingly vague and apparently contradictory. I'm not sure if Mike is suggesting that you pick an original pattern and follow it exactly (which people rarely do unless copying a specific gun), or use a simplified version of a specific design, or if he just means stick with the original style (which assumes you know what the original style is, is not, and how to follow your own muse while coloring inside the lines, so to speak). Maybe he could clarify...
Looking at originals is vital. What no one is telling you is
what to look for, which would really be helpful. Off the top of my head I can think of: C-shapes, S-shapes, shell patterns, volutes/scrolls/club ends, and leaf shapes, and I know there are some others. Most of mainstream longrifle carving is just different combinations of a comparatively few shapes and motifs, I think.
There are also, incidentally, a small number of original guns that feature critters, potted plants, and other folk art motifs that fall outside the paradigm outlined above. I happen to like these a lot, but they are a different discussion, really.
*
The most valuable art instruction I've ever been given was break down whatever I was drawing into a set of shapes and lines in proportion to each other. I have little skill as a traditional artist, but the practice of looking an object or design this way has been surprisingly useful over the years.*