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Hi Folks,
I am hoping someone can advise me. I am building a maple stocked American musket from the Revolutionary War. It will represent a colonial American restock of a British commercial musket from the F&I war. The premise is that a New Jersey militiaman had a local gunsmith restock parts from one of the commercial muskets purchased by New Jersey from Richard Wilson during the F&I war. The militiaman is having the gunsmith upgrade the old parts with a steel ramrod and brass muzzlecap. The stock is a nice piece of figured sugar maple logged by one of my friends in Vermont and dried for 10 years. It is an unbelievably dense and heavy stock blank. Anyway, I always do a lot of research for these projects and I visited quite a few museums that had examples of American-made muskets. In all of the examples, it appears the makers did not stain the maple, rather just finished the blond wood. The stocks I examined had some reddish-brown color but it may just be from age. Fowling guns made from maple were often stained to bring out the figure, but muskets maybe not. Can any of you site or recount examples of American-made maple stocked muskets that were stained by AF or other means to bring out the figure? Right now, my inclination is to just put an oil-varnish on the maple without stain but I would rather make the figure really show if it is historically correct. The key here is historical correctness. I want this gun to be historically bang on in appearance. That is my objective, not my or anybody else's personal taste.
dave
I am hoping someone can advise me. I am building a maple stocked American musket from the Revolutionary War. It will represent a colonial American restock of a British commercial musket from the F&I war. The premise is that a New Jersey militiaman had a local gunsmith restock parts from one of the commercial muskets purchased by New Jersey from Richard Wilson during the F&I war. The militiaman is having the gunsmith upgrade the old parts with a steel ramrod and brass muzzlecap. The stock is a nice piece of figured sugar maple logged by one of my friends in Vermont and dried for 10 years. It is an unbelievably dense and heavy stock blank. Anyway, I always do a lot of research for these projects and I visited quite a few museums that had examples of American-made muskets. In all of the examples, it appears the makers did not stain the maple, rather just finished the blond wood. The stocks I examined had some reddish-brown color but it may just be from age. Fowling guns made from maple were often stained to bring out the figure, but muskets maybe not. Can any of you site or recount examples of American-made maple stocked muskets that were stained by AF or other means to bring out the figure? Right now, my inclination is to just put an oil-varnish on the maple without stain but I would rather make the figure really show if it is historically correct. The key here is historical correctness. I want this gun to be historically bang on in appearance. That is my objective, not my or anybody else's personal taste.
dave