Poindexter
New member
Hey y'all.
I have two revolvers now, a 4" redhawk in 45 Colt for field carry and a 3.75" birdshead New Vaquero in 45 Colt as my appendiceal carry CCW.
I am thinking about a third gun, for open carry around town.
I am a working man, so a full on 100% engraved coverage with grip panels from the first elephant I took in Africa as a teenager ain't happening. I have never been to Africa and I don't see taking an elephant happening in this lifetime.
Rather than Texas style BBQ I am saving up for more of a "bbq" gun.
So far I am thinking a 4.75" Colt SAA in blue/ case hardended chambered 45Colt of course with "about" 25% engraving coverage and "something" for grips.
The look I want is "this gun belonged to my great great grandfather and ain't it cool."
For the engraving I am thinking I'll spread the 25% coverage around pretty even with a little curlicue here and there all over rather than slather one area and leave other areas plain. I have looked at hundreds of images on google and haven't seen the engraving I want yet, I might need to ask Colt to do like 15% coverage or something....
I am torn on grips too. I really want elk with some bark or walrus ivory or something, but every one I talk to is telling me all those sorts of grips (big horn sheep horn, buffalo horn) will shrink or crack or peel or something. What I am hearing is for an item to last many generations I really need either plastic (no) or wood stabilized in an epoxy bath.
So, does anyone know of an engraved gun that looks manly and cared for, valued, without looking like a museum piece or overdone?
What about oak as a grip material? I have some really really nice hybrid oak pieces just loaded with rays, just amazing stuff when quartersawn. I understand oak is quite porous and somewhat heavy comared to walnut- but really, is it that heavy? Can the epoxy not fill up the pores completely?
Right now I am looking at burl maple, birdseye maple or maybe holly among the woods that have been used before, but I don't love any of them.
Probably two years to complete this project, assuming the dishwasher really does break next time it makes that funny noise.
Ideas welcome.
I have two revolvers now, a 4" redhawk in 45 Colt for field carry and a 3.75" birdshead New Vaquero in 45 Colt as my appendiceal carry CCW.
I am thinking about a third gun, for open carry around town.
I am a working man, so a full on 100% engraved coverage with grip panels from the first elephant I took in Africa as a teenager ain't happening. I have never been to Africa and I don't see taking an elephant happening in this lifetime.
Rather than Texas style BBQ I am saving up for more of a "bbq" gun.
So far I am thinking a 4.75" Colt SAA in blue/ case hardended chambered 45Colt of course with "about" 25% engraving coverage and "something" for grips.
The look I want is "this gun belonged to my great great grandfather and ain't it cool."
For the engraving I am thinking I'll spread the 25% coverage around pretty even with a little curlicue here and there all over rather than slather one area and leave other areas plain. I have looked at hundreds of images on google and haven't seen the engraving I want yet, I might need to ask Colt to do like 15% coverage or something....
I am torn on grips too. I really want elk with some bark or walrus ivory or something, but every one I talk to is telling me all those sorts of grips (big horn sheep horn, buffalo horn) will shrink or crack or peel or something. What I am hearing is for an item to last many generations I really need either plastic (no) or wood stabilized in an epoxy bath.
So, does anyone know of an engraved gun that looks manly and cared for, valued, without looking like a museum piece or overdone?
What about oak as a grip material? I have some really really nice hybrid oak pieces just loaded with rays, just amazing stuff when quartersawn. I understand oak is quite porous and somewhat heavy comared to walnut- but really, is it that heavy? Can the epoxy not fill up the pores completely?
Right now I am looking at burl maple, birdseye maple or maybe holly among the woods that have been used before, but I don't love any of them.
Probably two years to complete this project, assuming the dishwasher really does break next time it makes that funny noise.
Ideas welcome.