James . When it comes to American Indian examples.
We dictate what is traditional . What we consider traditional also is always evolving. .
Our culture is constantly changing and moving as such so are our traditions .
What I was trying to get at with the rifles is that if we as gunsmiths , hobby smiths or just the average person who build s , do not further our base . We then become stagnant .
Think about this .
How did the American long rifle come about ?
Basically, smiths of the time used what they had learned from their masters . Kept some of the influences but added a lot of their own .
What come of that was something distinctly American.
When we look at many of the more well known smiths today . We see that they also are capable of doing just that . IE taking the past , adding in some of the present and giving the world something while reprehensive of the past . Its still distinctly their own ..
If we do not do that . Then what we have done IMO is just copied the past . Again nothing wrong with that . But I believe that all it shows is how well we can copy .
Currently there is a discussion on this board about carvings .
Now I have yet red the days posts . But as of this morning , no one had mentioned doing your own carvings ? Why not .
Lets say a person was to study Rococo patterns . Then produces there own Rococo design . That design becomes theirs , even though its base is 200 years old .
Same thing goes with engravings . The engraving done of American rifles is distinct . Both in its designs and its quality when compared to engraving of European smiths of the same time frame .
Now would that type of heavy relief engraving fit on say an Emil rifle
Nope .
But should we look down on those who would put it on a rifle they made today
I think not . The reason being is that the rifle is now distinctive to that person . 150 years from now it may just define the person who did it .
Im fear is that we have fallen into a phase where much of what is produced is really copies . Thus I wonder if in the future , our times of today and the wonderful ensample we produce , may be looked at as a time of stagnation
The other thing that I find done today that we didn’t or at least did not hear much of . Is the coping of proofing marks and such as a way to try and make the most historically accurate piece .
To me , there just seems something wrong with that . Possibly a step to far .
I don’t know . Again im just talking here