Nessmuck56 said:
Artificer said:
Do you care if it is authentic or not? If so, what time period, region, etc.? Will you use it for reenacting?
Gus
No reenacting...like I mentioned,I shoot a Tulle ,so maybe something around that time..New England style maybe not...will see what floats my boat. Price...not on a budget. Thanks !!
OK, that is a good beginning.
Now, what do you intend to carry in the Shooting Pouch? This is important for the size of the pouch as well as how big your hand/s are, to comfortably and efficiently reach in and get things out. One also has to think about internal or external sewn on pockets or internal divider flaps that would separate the interior space into two sections. If one can't get one's hand in the pocket or get the item out of the pocket easily, that could be a problem. Some folks prefer an internal dividing flap to keep the things they need less in the back part of the pouch and keep the things like balls and/or shot, powder measure, patches or cards and wads, short starter, grease tin (if they want or need one) in the front of the pouch where it is easier to get at them. Some folks with a gun like yours actually use two different shooting pouches, one if they are shooting ball and another if they are shooting shot.
So what I recommend is you lay out the "stuff" you want to carry in the pouch because that (and the size of your hand) will help you decide the size of the pouch you need and want. For example, you might/would need a little larger shooting pouch than bare minimum size if you carried a shot bag and or small powder horn in your pouch. Some folks carry their shot in an external shot bag that is often or usually called a "shot snake," so they don't need to make room for it in their pouch. I did that with my smoothbore, as I shot it a lot more with ball than I ever did with shot. Here is just one example to let you see what I mean:
http://leatherfromthepast.blogspot.com/2015/02/shot-snake.html
A VERY minimalistic original period pouch would be a belt pouch that is often referred to as a "Lyman" Pouch. With a belt pouch, people carried everything else they needed in pockets in their clothing.
http://www.muzzleloadingforum.com/fusionbb/showtopic.php?tid/273309/
The next "step up" in size is what is often known as a "Day Pouch" or sometimes a minimalistic pouch. The "Day Pouch" kept just those items needed to shoot the gun during a day of hunting/shooting. There are not many original 18th century shooting pouches left and it seems most of the ones that survived are in this category. (My personal speculation is these survived because they were not used on a day to day basis and spent much of their life inside the cabin or house, but I may be mistaken.)
If you carry your powder measure and vent pick on straps or cords attached to the outside of the shooting pouch, you don't need as much room inside the pouch. If you carry a patch knife outside the pouch, you don't need room for it in the pouch either.
Personally, I like my shooting pouches a bit larger than a day pouch, but that is from years of shooting on the Primitive Range and the fact I have rather large hands. In many of the matches I shot, once you crossed a line, you could not go back and get something you forgot. I like this idea for even a hunting pouch. Also, I kept a large Ball Starter (for .75 caliber) in my pouch and they usually did not use them in the 18th century, so they did not need as large of a pouch. I also kept an adjustable powder measure in my pouch because at the time, I could only afford to make one shooting pouch to use with either my Musket or Flint Rifle. So I switched Ball Starters and components when I went from one gun to the other.
Some folks do not consider a "Turnscrew" or Screwdriver essential for a shooting pouch, but I most definitely will have one in my shooting pouch without fail. I have filed the Top Jaw Screw on my guns so one size Turnscrew will fit it and my side plate screws for my Lock. I have not OFTEN had occasion to need to tighten or replace a flint in my Top Jaw, but it has happened. I don't want to have to go back to the car or back home for a screwdriver when that happens. I like at least an internal flap divider in my pouch to keep the Turnscrew/Screwdriver, flint pouch, flint leathers, Ball Puller and Worm in the back where I don't often need to get at them. Now, an easy answer to carry a somewhat flat Turnscrew/Screwdriver or Period Combination Tool is to sew a small pouch on the front of the pouch, where the outer flap covers it.
I don't carry a "Bag Mold", Period fishing gear, flint and steel kit, etc., etc., so I don't need as large of a shooting pouch as some folks use. I do sometimes carry a small pair of period style pliers in my pouch but there is room for them behind the rear flap. Some folks carry a small "emergency" pill box there, if they need to do so.
I hope I didn't confuse you, but what you will carry in your pouch and the size of your hands has a lot to do with how large of a shooting pouch you need.
Gus