Gunsmith,
I'm working under the presumption that your post is in reply to my comment on the Wickliffe's looks.
I'd start out by saying that no parent ever thought that they had a homely child. But some of them do.
Hell-for-strong, or not, that gun's lines, to me are like a badly put together woman. Just not attractive. It seems, to my eye, that the design took all the places where the Stevens 14 1/2 started to bulge away from having really nice lines, and expanded outwards on the worst bulges. It reminds me of the Spencer repeater in that respect. A little too much, in a couple of the wrong places, to make the lines look "right".
Don't take it to heart. I feel the same way about British airplanes from after WW2, and an awful pile of British guns. And an awful pile of really expensive modern single shot rifles.
They just don't do it for me.
When the time comes that I spend a pocketful of bills on a gun, it is going to be on a firearm that is able to please my eye as well as please me at the range. I don't mind owning a homely gun, I just want it to be an affordable homely gun.
I wish you nothing but success in your venture. The world needs more fine shooting rifles.
Me, I want a good shooting rifle, that looks and feels right, to me. So far the Win 1885 seems it. Rolling blocks are affordable, and a Favorite is a pretty nice little plinking gun, but neither of them feels quite right to me.
If you make accurate rifles, it won't matter if they look like they were hogged off a block with a torch, you'll sell all you can make! But they will have to prove themselves on the range, rather than on the ad copy!
Good thing we don't all have the same tastes. It'd be a rough go for all the guys that "didn't" get the one perfect .....
Cheers
Trev