I did a bit of research on the Leman rifles before deciding to try it myself. It seems he did it to appeal to his customers tastes. Perhaps mostly natives? There also seemed to be quite a few different opinions about how it was done. The one that made most sense to me was a fellow who studied a bunch of Leman rifles and eventually noticed a repeating pattern to the stripes. He speculated it was done with a wide paint brush cut down and notched so as to lay on several lines with each brush stroke.
Following that premise, I took a 3 inch wide china bristle brush and cut the bristles down to leave them one inch long. Then I cut 7 notches out of those trying not to have them all the same width or the same spacing. Practicing on scrap boards I noticed that flipping the brush over for each stroke left a more natural appearance in the spacing and width of the stripes.
First I stained the stock with Laurel Mountain Forage stains. I like the nut brown with a layer of maple color to get a reddish brown. I used brown leather dye from Tandy for the stripes. I poured a little of the leather dye into a shallow pan and dipped only the tips of the brush. Then paint on a line of stripes, dip the brush again, flip it and paint on the next row.
I like the results I got. In fact I like my stripes better than those on the original Leman rifles I 've seen.
Here are before and after photos of the two rifles I've done. Fax stripes may not be your cup of tea, but I think these rifles look much better with the stripe treatment.
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