Just couldn't stand it no longer...(My Ol' 3rd Model HE)

Well Yea there Larry,

I think that thar mother o' pearl is pretty...Looks really nice on those lit'l revolvers and automatics.
Especially in a garter holster on sum nice lookin gal's lag. ;)

Ivory is jest showy enough to fit in jest about anywheres and tough enough to be a billiard ball.:D

An HD that found it's way to becoming a 44 Special...With Ivory britches

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Su Amigo,
Dave
 
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This is just my personal opinion, but I kind of like pearly grips. I know they're a lot harder to make and have a tendency to crack and chip out at the corners. We've got a friend up here who sidelines as a dentist (he's a full time scoundrel who covers as many gun shows as he can.) Over the past few years he's wandered out of gun shows on Friday or Saturday, coming back the next day with the grips he took home. He somehow knows how to fix the bad places with the same stuff they use on teeth. Some kind of epoxy and I think UV light. If your a real good eye, you can sometimes tell where the fix went in. But only if you knew before.

And I agree, Ivory is a wonderful substance. Its a lot like the soap, only heavier. It files, grinds, and sands at a very predictable rate. You can even polish it with a rag and one finger, using Flitz or Simichrome. Better still, if you get lazy and don't use a progression of finer sandpaper, it still polishes up so good it takes a magnifier to tell. I don't think there is much of a health risk from inhaling the dust. Probably no worse than human tooth grinding, and there sure are a bunch of retired dentists floating around.

Pearl is a toxic substance. I have no idea how much you can breath in before you croak, or flop around on the floor like a carp. I've never been afraid to use a dremel tool on it, but for polish only. I do have this fear of it getting hot and splitting out. Buffing it lightly shouldn't be bad.
 
We've got a friend up here who sidelines as a dentist (he's a full time scoundrel who covers as many gun shows as he can.)

Dick, don't be hard on your old friend up there. We're all taught those characteristics in the first year of dental school! Required curriculum.;)

Bob
 
You guys postin' pix of the purty guns need to also tell us what they started life as. While we all like purdy, its even better if we know what we're oogling.


Wells Dick,

I guess ye right sumtimes ! :D:eek:

I never thought how thoughtless it was jest to give y'all a peek and not they whole lag. ;)

For those of you that's a tunin' in late...I posted this for Burg.
A lit'l nip of the heel 'bout them Oriental Dragons and such.

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If your squeamish or a purest please look away! ;):D:eek:








Dick,
I'm thinkin it all started round 'bout '34...
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Su Amigo,
Dave
 
Your an inspiration, having as much fun with a .44 as I'm having with a .22.....maybe have to keep my eye peeled for something a little more interesting on the order of that old .44. I own a Model 29 with a 6.5" barrel, its accurate enough but just too much hog leg to be an enjoyable traveling companion. .44 Special has always been my favorite centerfire cartridge, excellent accuracy potential and plenty of knock-down power.
 
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