
Hardwood grip slabs for making your own handgun grips, walnut, Gaboon ebony, bubinga and Indian rosewood.
Wood slabs shown are samples only, all are different.
| fancy American black walnut,
sliced from a stock blank sawn over 125 years ago. Right
& below > This is beautiful heartwood with loads of color and figure, even some fiddleback. I have very little of this left, the photo below is a nearly finished S&W grip made from this same blank. |
fancy American walnut slabs about 3" x 4" x 11/16" thick. $60. pair |
Below: American black walnut from old, unused but broken military stock blanks (not used gun stocks or furniture), sawn about century ago. This is nothing fancy, although some of this will have a little figure, the important thing is its good solid American heartwood that will be suitable for building factory duplication grips for many 19th century handguns. Not match sawn, but I have put togther some very nicely matched sets that will not disappoint. Slabs are about 2½ -2¾"x 4" x3/16" thick. $20. pair |
Below: American black walnut from old, unused but brokenmilitary gun stock blanks (not used gun stocks or furniture), sawn more than a century ago. This primarily very straight grained, good solid American heartwood, suitable for building factory duplication grips for many 19th century handguns. Match sawn. Slabs are about 3½" x 4" x ¾" thick. $30. pair |
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Below: Indian Rosewood. Sawn about
100 years ago, this has some good figure and is extremely
dense and heavy. Match sets.
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