First let me say your craftsman ship is good, you should keep on building rifles.
eace: You need to get ahold of Shumways "Colonial Rifles Vol I & II. They will set you straight as to the different "schools" and what can be mixed together and what can't or shouldn't.
Your carving is good, but maybe just a little too high. The butt stock moulding is different, but maybe would look better on a euro gun...just a little too far outside american kentuck rifle work. I n fact with a second look, the panel should rise above the wood, not be lower...you've got it reversed I think. The Isac Haines carving behing the cheek piece is well done, but out of place on a virginia rifle. The box lid is a little ornate for an early Virginia gun.....maybe something that would look better on a jeager.
They keys are a nice touch, I would have left off the escutchions, early virginia guns didn't have escutchions.
The plated brass......
I don't know what to say...not my cup of tea....
eace: Next time you use AQ kill it after words with a baking soda bath, and you'll not have trouble with brass discoloration.
And lastly, and this is a common problem for fellows that havn't built alot of these, there's too much wood left. The fore stock from the lock forward looks a little bulky...not bad, but it could have been a little slimer.
Every one develops their own "style". I have mine, and my guns can be recognized from a distance because of it. Lucky for me other people like it and I'm able to sell guns for a living. If you pursue gunmaking you will have a style of your own too, I can already see it and it will be pleasant to view. This really isn't a bad gun, and you should be pleased with it.
This is meant as constuctive critisism, and not as a slight in any way. It is the rare few that will ask for a critque and fewer still that will listen and benifit from it.
So, in the end, Good job, get some books and study up, and try another one....thats how we all start out on the road to making these things, alot of trial and error.
:hatsoff: