Comfortably_Numb
The Evil Mike Brooks
Carolina guns were mostly stocked in beech, walmnut was used to a lesser extent.
Like this Belgian musket!The Birmingham Trade frequently produced "muskets" with painted stocks -- - reduced the cost and made them more saleable to the "native trade".
Of course, it was not restricted to stocks. Pedersoli produced a DB percussion gun which had a "printed" barrel in the early days -- looked just like damascus.
Even more likely was what went on in the Belgian Trade, especially for cheap exports .... still being made well into the 1930s and maybe later.
It is a Belgian trade musket. I'm in the process of reworking it to look like an English trade musket c1750s. This was for sale online and I saw the potential with the lock and butt plate. It won't get repainted, though I was tempted.Tumbledown, that rifle may grow on me. Odd but strangely attractive.
We had a history of painting red bands on the lend lease rifles we sent over to England in WW2. Wide red bands were painted on the stocks to differentiated the ones chambered in .303 British vs .30-06. I always thought they were neat looking.
It was started because the US sent a lot of our 1917 "Enfield" rifles to England at the beginning of the war and they were so similar to the British Pattern 1914 "Enfield" rifles that a very visual distinction had to be made.
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