I submitted a post in this thread last week, but it has apparently been lost or not posted for some reason.
I clicked on the
https://www.altamontco.com/engraving link and then clicked on several of the guns hoping for details about the process used. Some of them, including the Browning 725 Citori did not clearly state that the engraving was laser reproduction of some stock pattern. So it isn't clear which were "real" hand cut engraving, and which were done either partially or totally by the laser process. In the description for the Citori, it said this:
NOTE FROM THE ENGRAVER:
This project took years and more hours than I can count. I cannot begin to describe how it invigorated me and pushed me to improve my engraving skills. Learning to engrave 725’s took me to Japan, and changed my life. I owe this project a lot. Thank you to Browning and Miroku for making this special project possible. Thank you to Dan Kynoch and my father for believing in this project and supporting it. Thank you to all who helped make my dream a reality.
I hope this shotgun is well-used and passed down to the next generation. I have my Dad’s Belgian-made Superposed from fifty years ago. The little dents in the beautiful wood remind me of his adventures and hunting stories. Hunting memories are forever. We had a basic engraved over-under when I was a kid that my brothers and I would fight over using. I won enough that it became “mine”. I still associate that shotgun with all of our dove and pheasant hunts.
I hope this shotgun helps you and future generations make great memories. Enjoy the field.
Sincerely,
Merlin EnrightSo we really don't know whether this particular gun was the original hand cut model, or simply a reproduction. While it appears that the process has improved greatly compared to a lot of the butt-ugly, soulless, and lifeless early laser engraving, it is still a mere reproduction. And I feel the cost and added value should and would be something like the comparison between an original one-of-a-kind oil painting, and a print that was reproduced and sold in volume. I'd guess that at this point, real engravers and serious students of engraving styles could quickly tell which was hand cut, which was cut with a power graver, or which was done by a machine. It would be interesting to hear the thoughts of some real firearm engravers like Kutter and Sam Welch.