So, here are my different creations from 2021:

And now some close ups.
Here is a picture of the front of my cartridge box for .44 Army paper cartridges:

And here is the back of the .44 Army cartridge box:

The front of the .36 Navy cartridge box:

And the back of the same .36 Navy cartridge box:

Here is one for the .31 Pocket models:

And the back of the .31 Pocket paper cartridge box:

All of these molds were made by Lee Precision for Eras Gone By, and are historically accurate molds. I do not have a British Kerr revolver yet, but hope to some day! So I went ahead and got the proper mold, and here’s a picture of the front of that box:

Along with the rear of the same .44 Kerr British Army box:

Here is the “Richmond Laboratories” .36 Navy which I designed for one of the more famous Confederate cap and ball revolvers, the Spiller & Burr:

And, you guessed it, the rear of that box:

Here’s a peek inside. Most are similar – seven holes, holding six rounds and one hole for percussion caps. Except for the .31 caliber; those are six holes total with five for paper cartridges and one for percussion caps.

I also watched a video on how to recreate the proper loading for the .58 Caliber rifled musket. I made period correct paper wrappers for 10 cartridges + a tube of percussion caps, but also created a non-period correct box, being more sturdy, for display:

And what the heck? I might as well create some paper cartridges and a box for my .69 Caliber Tower Pistol reproduction!

For the bullet lube tins I used old Crosman .22-caliber pellet tins. Here is one with the 3:1 beeswax to lamb’s tallow mix:

And one with the 2:1 mix:

Both of those are primarily used for dipping bullets for cap and ball revolvers. For filling lube grooves on cast bullets for the .58-caliber, I use a stiffer mixture of 8:1:

And then I created a Mink Oil Tin for patch lubrication for my flintlock firearms:

And just to prove it was me…
