I just had to split this discussion from the other one...not because I care a lick about keeping a topic on track, I just wanted to talk about fancy guns.
A good friend of mine had his FFL up until a couple years ago. Selling firearms in CA, particularly out of his home in the suburbs, just became to problematic. Let's just say the climate ain't what it used to be around here, and leave it at that...
Anyway, every year we would take our trek to the
Shot Show in Las Vegas. For those of you who have never heard of it, it's the firearm industry's annual trade show. The general public is not allowed in - you must be affiliated with the firearms industry, and I always slid in as "Vice President" under my buddy's FFL. Manufacturers, distributors and dealers from around the world are there. It takes up acres of space at the Las Vegas Convention Center; it takes at least two days just to get around all the booths.
My favorite stop, every year...The Perazzi booth. It's unreal...you walk into their booth, and just start picking up $10K shotguns - and those are the cheap ones! As you work your way up the scale, the engraving gets increasingly more elaborate, and the grain you see in the stocks just makes your jaw drop.
Not only is that stuff way out of my league, I typically enjoy firearms that are more utilitarian. Still, I've always had a soft spot for a good lookin' gun.
One of my all time favorites is the Winchester Model 1906. Many of you may remember them from your youth, back when the carnivals actually had real gallery guns. They've got a tube magazine that extends the length of the barrel, have a pump action, and are just a ball to shoot. While the originals are getting a little rare, you can still find a decent shooter for a couple hundred bucks if you keep your eyes open.
I've got one that has had untold thousands of rounds through it - picked it up for $75 many years ago, and it was pretty beat up then. Rusty and pitted...it wouldn't surprise me at all if it was an actual carnival gun. The fact that it looks like something that got tossed in and out of a pickup bed for years, is one of the reasons I like it so much. It still shoots great, and has character! But...it definitely falls into the category of "ugly gun".
So...my one and only "looker" is a little unique. While drooling over the Perazzi's at the Shot Show many years ago, it hit me - I could have a shooting beauty that meant more to me than any of those fancy Italian jobs. My goal: to build a custom version of my favorite plinker - the Winchester Model 1906.
Got back home, and started looking. Within a few months, I found a sweet 1906 at a local gun show. It had some minor bluing wear, but no rust and in perfect mechanical condition. My buddy with the FFL thought I was nuts, but he obliged me...he dealt with a lot of older Colts and Winchesters, and knew the best of the best in the antique firearms restoration business. I packed my 1906 up, and sent it off to
Turnbull Restorations - an outfit known for incredible attention to detail. They use the techniques of old, including color case hardening and charcoal bluing. Demand is huge for their services...they had my 1906 for almost a year.
For the stock and fore-end grip, I scored a real find. I wanted something in walnut, and real fancy. I knew that meant going custom, and the wallet was already hurting from Turnbull. I called up a custom stock maker referred to me by my friend, and after telling him what I wanted, I couldn't believe my ears. He had taken on the exact project for a client, but the guy never paid him - he had a fancy walnut stock and fore-end grip, in stock, and shipped it that day. And the best part...the guy had forfeited his deposit, and the guy let me have it for a song. When it arrived, I couldn't believe my eyes...simply beautiful.
Well, enough jibber jabber - here's my baby. Most folks think I'm nuts when they find out how much I spent on an old gallery gun, and perhaps they're right. But I still get goose bumps every time I pick her up...
Here's a link to a hi-res version of the same photo - shows off the wood and color case hardening a little better.