I have several revolver grips made of rosewood, but I have never seen a piece big enough for a rifle stock.
I think the OP's original intention was to use the rosewood as a decorative element; inlays, a nose cap, perhaps a patchbox lid, that sort of thing.I have several revolver grips made of rosewood, but I have never seen a piece big enough for a rifle stock.
YupI think the OP's original intention was to use the rosewood as a decorative element; inlays, a nose cap, perhaps a patchbox lid, that sort of thing.
Cased English rifles 1770s-1970s often came with turnscrews with rosewood or ebony handles, and rosewood or ebony ramrods. Often the small jars in the case are made from turned rosewood or ebony, too. If you have this stuff, treasure it.I have some incredibly beautiful deep dark, rock hard, figured wood that was destined to become guitar fretboards
Unfortunately the company went bust. I was their real estate broker and had the opportunity to buy some of this wood up (along with the luthiers bench where Johnny Cash, Eddie Van Halen and a few other stars sat while their guitars were being taken care of,)
South America was already well settled at the time most of the guns we are interested in were made. I find it hard to believe that some of these exotics never made it into any of them.
I'm thinking about combining some into the wooden patch box, an inlay or two, and maybe as a nose cap in a Chambers Smooth Rifle build I'm doing.