Jerry Samouce
40 Cal
- Joined
- Mar 11, 2020
- Messages
- 141
- Reaction score
- 400
I am new to the whole reenactment thing as I have been doing it for only 1 year.
Being afraid to mess it up, the amazing gunsmith David Ricketts assembled on commission and delivered my first Flintlock Rifle to me a week ago.
It is a Jim Chambers Mark Silver 58cal Virginia Rifle and even non-zeroed with a bit of "Kentucky windage" it shoots like a dream!
Now, I also happen to have been working wood with chisels off and on for over 20 years and I am very confident in those skills.
So, I made my first design and posted it on my FB page. This first design was shot down (pun intended) by My local Rev War Mentors as way too fancy and thus inaccurate historically. So, I took their advise and simplified things to come to my second design.
I am moving toward reenacting one of my relatives who lived on the frontier of south western NC and served as a captain of NC Militia during Kings Mountain to Yorktown.
John Whiteside moved as a kid to the wilderness of NC with his blacksmith father William Whiteside and family… which means F&I War time too.
What I love most about Rev War reenactment is that it is the perfect excuse to fully explore and combine my strange assortment of art mediums: sometimes simultaneously...
Here is my wood work so far... (There are photo filters on the last to for better contrast)
Being afraid to mess it up, the amazing gunsmith David Ricketts assembled on commission and delivered my first Flintlock Rifle to me a week ago.
It is a Jim Chambers Mark Silver 58cal Virginia Rifle and even non-zeroed with a bit of "Kentucky windage" it shoots like a dream!
Now, I also happen to have been working wood with chisels off and on for over 20 years and I am very confident in those skills.
So, I made my first design and posted it on my FB page. This first design was shot down (pun intended) by My local Rev War Mentors as way too fancy and thus inaccurate historically. So, I took their advise and simplified things to come to my second design.
I am moving toward reenacting one of my relatives who lived on the frontier of south western NC and served as a captain of NC Militia during Kings Mountain to Yorktown.
John Whiteside moved as a kid to the wilderness of NC with his blacksmith father William Whiteside and family… which means F&I War time too.
What I love most about Rev War reenactment is that it is the perfect excuse to fully explore and combine my strange assortment of art mediums: sometimes simultaneously...
Here is my wood work so far... (There are photo filters on the last to for better contrast)