The Many Faces of "Rosewood"

Do you guys expect these are rosewood also? I figured they were based on that grain on the back of them.

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Is there some significance to the fact that there are only two numbers stamped on these and those J-Frames?

Any idea when these and those J-Frame stocks may have been made? 1960s?
 
Do you guys expect these are rosewood also? I figured they were based on that grain on the back of them.

Is there some significance to the fact that there are only two numbers stamped on these and those J-Frames?

Any idea when these and those J-Frame stocks may have been made? 1960s?

Six - they are absolutely Rosewood. I'd guess that they are late 50's / early 60's.
The significance of the two digit numbers is to keep the two wood panels together til the end of finishing (of manufacturing).
Here is a set of J Rosewood Magnas with similar stamping.



 
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Ended up with some non-relieved K frame rosewood targets (pretty sure, sometimes you guys surprise me by telling me I am wrong, my rosewood lust may blind me a bit at times.)

In any case, they are pretty as heck.

I haven't seen many around. Those Rosewood N Frames on my 5" 27 here are pretty much my favorite factory stocks, I couldn't resist pairing them with the K frames which don't have the same kind of profile, but seem to be the same wood. Maybe with a few repairs, I can't quite tell if its just natural variation in the wood or if someone has tinkered with them.

In any case, they seem to go well on the pre-17. They feel really nice too.
 
rosewood stocks

I love rosewood stocks, and after seeing the Eagle smooth rosewood Classics, i just had to dress my 28-2 4" and 6". Great thread and absolutely beautiful stocks !!!:):)




 
Can you guys give me your opinion?

These were labeled Ebony, but I'm not sure. They look an awful lot like old rosewood to me. I do however have rosewood on the brain so I am wondering if that's my issue.



 




Gotta go. Try to share more later. Love rosewood, and have an acoustic guitar that smells like heaven.
 
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I really had to think long and hard to come up with a gun that might have Rosewood stocks on it. This was the last Ladysmith they made before going to the 357 J Frame. The only one rated +P and the last one to have solid stocks. Circa 1991. It's a 60-7 and had very brief window of production.
 

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I first noticed the beauty of rosewood in 1969 when I purchased a Bear HC300 recurve target bow. It has some of the prettiest (I think) Brazilian rosewood I have ever seen. Kept that bow for over 30 years, even after I no longer competed in archery.
 
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