19th November 2013, 11:21 AM | #11 |
Member
Join Date: Jan 2013
Location: Scotland
Posts: 330
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Spot the difference
Hi Marcus,
As Jim and others have remarked various times, this forum should priorily be reserved to historic and authentic original pieces. What is even worse in terms of purity and science: the gun shown here is a complete fantasy piece; he only used some influences and features of an existing ca. 1530-35 wheellock mechanism! The shape and style of decoration of the stock is mere fantasy as well, with some similarities to original pieces of ca. 1600 (!) at best, so what he did was producing a crude and cruel mixture of styles combining a span of ca. 70 years in one piece and filling in the gaps with a lot of imagination ... No such original gun did ever exist, and I do do not feel very pleased to see those confusing images in my thread that is on pure originals! So once again: Please do stick to originals or do copy them absolutely exactly! Best, Michael[/QUOTE] Hi all, This is not my area of expertise so please correct me if I'm wrong. But it looks to me as though this 'fantasy piece' is an 'absolute exact' copy of a wheelock being sold as an antique on a website in the UK! I won't put the direct link as it contains the price but it can be found under: Antique Guns at gunstar.co.uk. Regards, CC |
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