Scrimshaw attempt

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Joined
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Decided to try my hand at some scrimshaw on a horn I made. My hat is definitely off to those that do this all the time. I think I'll leave it to the professionals.
 

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Decided to try my hand at some scrimshaw on a horn I made. My hat is definitely off to those that do this all the time. I think I'll leave it to the professionals.
Looks good. Age it a little and it will look like something you would see in museum setting. They weren’t all professional artists back in the day.
 
I'm in the let it age by itself camp. I have never seen one that looked right to me that was stained to look old. I have seen lots of scrimshawed work that was left without any sealer that looked very correct. just my opinion
 
Looks good. Age it a little and it will look like something you would see in museum setting. They weren’t all professional artists back in the day.

My opinion, IF you're going to display it, then age it. IF you're going to carry and use it, don't age it. Why would a guy who made and scrimshawed a horn have a horn that looked 100 years old? It's your horn, and totally up to you.

On the other hand IF you were going to hunt near me, with all the Yahoos out and about, I'd probably tell you to age the horn, because that white horn bouncing on your hip in the woods during deer season might draw fire from one or more of the goofballs who label themselves "deer hunters" in my community. I use a plain horn dyed brown for hunting ; my target shooting and living history horn being white.

LD
 

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