Brasilikilt
45 Cal.
- Joined
- Dec 13, 2005
- Messages
- 560
- Reaction score
- 1
Hey everyone
I just finished a horn this morning and thought since many of you were kind enough to give me a lot of helpful advice, I figured you all might like to check out the results.
As some of you may notice, I left some natural gouges in the horn, mostly because it gives it an authentic look, and scraping the horn enough to remove them would result in too thin a horn which I'm afraid would probably not withstand honest use.
And let's face it, most of us prefer our gear to look as though it's been knocked around the mountains for a few years :grin:
I used copper wire to pin the base plug which I think looks great! a lot better than the domed "brass" tacks I had bought. :shake:
As usual, the horn is super air tight, with the pine base plug having a heat-applied saturation of linseed oil and wax, which repels water as if some Jedi witchdoctor cast an anti-moisture force field around it.
Anyways.........let me know what you all think.
Take care
Iain
I just finished a horn this morning and thought since many of you were kind enough to give me a lot of helpful advice, I figured you all might like to check out the results.
As some of you may notice, I left some natural gouges in the horn, mostly because it gives it an authentic look, and scraping the horn enough to remove them would result in too thin a horn which I'm afraid would probably not withstand honest use.
And let's face it, most of us prefer our gear to look as though it's been knocked around the mountains for a few years :grin:
I used copper wire to pin the base plug which I think looks great! a lot better than the domed "brass" tacks I had bought. :shake:
As usual, the horn is super air tight, with the pine base plug having a heat-applied saturation of linseed oil and wax, which repels water as if some Jedi witchdoctor cast an anti-moisture force field around it.
Anyways.........let me know what you all think.
Take care
Iain