
This package of landing eagles on 1911
grip panels with a border cost $60 per
panel. Scrimshaw work is especially attractive on ivory,
ivory look-alike and pearl and pearl look-alike grips. Each sample
of scrimshaw work on this page has under it the price that you would
pay for one grip panel with the number of colors shown.

This coiled rattler was on one panel of
a set of Ruger Vaquero grips I scrimshawed for a SASS
member whose alias is Big
Rattler.

The single-color eagle on one panel of
these K-frame Smith & Wesson Grips cost
$50. The three-color Texas map on the other was
$70.

I put this scrimshawed eagle on the
poly-ivory grips on a pair of consecutively numbered
Colt SAAs. This design costs $50 per grip
panel.

Initials scrimshawed on handgun
grips run only $30 per
panel.

This scrimshawed
grizzly bear on a Cimarron Schofield grip with a bear
track in the medallion position and cross-hatch border
cost $75 per panel.

These grip panels
went to a man whose SASS alias is Irish Jack. This
job with three colors on the shamrocks, plus the name is
$90 per
panel.

This bugling elk
on a Ruger Blackhawk grip cost $50 per
panel.

This was a unique
request from a gentleman in Virginia. The nude
cowgirl cost $50 and the initials on the other panel
cost
$30.

This design on one
panel of the set of 1860 Army grips cost
$70.

These full-color
roses on Pearlite grips for a lovely SASS shooter whose
alias is Tumbleweed Rose would cost $110 per
panel.

This is the first
real ivory grip I carved. With the main image and
border, this job is
$70.

This coiled
rattler was on one panel of a set of Ruger Vaquero grips
I scrimshawed for a SASS member whose alias is Big
Rattler. Each panel was $60.

This ceremonial
bison skull on real pearl cost
$60

This
scrimshaw of John Wayne as he appeared in Rio Bravo was
on a slab of Micarta. In 5 by 7 size it would cost
$200.