Ok, good, now that we're safe from his prying eyes we can discuss the horn I'm making him. Maybe he'll take a peek, but I thought it would be interesting to do a live(+/-) powder horn montage on the creative process. It's easy to pat yourself on the back after the fact, but it's a whole lot different when you're in the heat of the battle and things aren't going your way. If things go wrong then I've got some slick ways of getting out of trouble, if things go really wrong then I will start begging people for help, anything past that and this whole thread is getting memory holed.
I'm basing this horn off of this really greasy original with an out of proportion faceted tip and an out of proportion faceted neck so I needed to pick out a horn from my box of dog chews that has a lot of meat on it...
perhaps I should have gotten greedier with the tip? A number of months ago I blew through the sides of probably my best 2 horns because I got greedy drilling the tip. Hard to say if this'll come back to bite me later on...
The tip had a very obnoxious delamination that went from the tip all the way to the neck I had to rasp through, fortunately I had the material to do so. The sharpie lines and duct tape are there to map out my indecisiveness. You have the golden mean, and an out of proportion line more inline with the original, and you have the limitations of the horn and somewhere in there is the correct answer.
Here's about where I call it for now. Hole drilled, roughed out somewhat, and base heated and shaping cone in. The base has a little bit of a kicked out and jaunty look that I like, probably not optimal for the horn, but neat so I'll see if that can be maintained later on when it gets to shaping the base plug. It has roughly the proportions and weight of a bowling pin so a colossal amount of material still needs to be removed prior to shaping any finer details.