- Joined
- Jul 24, 2018
- Messages
- 4,497
- Reaction score
- 5,647
Not one person who does any research will be fooled by a defarbed replica, the Tucker & Sherrards , Spiller & Burrs and Griswolds done by Lodgewood are for extreme enthusiasts or collectors who want a shootable Confederate revolver that doesn't have a paragraph of text stamped on it , and has the correct markings.
The intent of "aging" a percussion revolver is usually not to make it look 170 years old but to give it honest service wear . Either for a reenactor who doesn't want to display a fresh out of the box Uberti 1860 Army or for people who just want a "hard used" look.
Cimarron offers the Old West finish because there is a demand for the "well used" look.
This "Schneider & Glassick" looks like a gun that was carried and used. I just fired it today, removing the blue enhances my enjoyment of it.
Uberti also sells guns in Charcoal Blue to be more historically accurate. But that blue is extremely delicate.
Do what you like, that's why this is a hobby.
The intent of "aging" a percussion revolver is usually not to make it look 170 years old but to give it honest service wear . Either for a reenactor who doesn't want to display a fresh out of the box Uberti 1860 Army or for people who just want a "hard used" look.
Cimarron offers the Old West finish because there is a demand for the "well used" look.
This "Schneider & Glassick" looks like a gun that was carried and used. I just fired it today, removing the blue enhances my enjoyment of it.
Uberti also sells guns in Charcoal Blue to be more historically accurate. But that blue is extremely delicate.
Do what you like, that's why this is a hobby.