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- Jun 17, 2019
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Yeah, back in the old days, there were commercial horn makers, even used the furnitureWhen I first started making horns I wanted to give them that parchment like look. I visited a local museum and they kindly allowed me examine a few original old horns. To me, the coloration did not appear to be natural aging, thought that factor added to the beauty of the existing color. So I went home and thought about how they would have attained such a color and figured they were probably boiling them in left over tea grindings and onion skins, things common to them. Plus boiling softened up the horn for carving, scraping, and fitting the butt cap. This is what I have been doing ever since. I think back in the day a uncolored white horn would have been the exception, and not the norm, especially those horns made by those in the business of doing such.
Robby
pulls for hardware. Not every old-timer wanted or needed to make his own. You could go to a 'general store' and buy a horn ready-made; they were just a tool or usable item needed for shooting. Not every one was a carved, engraved, historical record, of course.