See now if I got one of these rigs I'd have to go buy a White Testarossa, a white suit with a pastel undershirt..... white loafers... no socks...some hair product..... and last but not least.... A Bren Ten.
See now if I got one of these rigs I'd have to go buy a White Testarossa, a white suit with a pastel undershirt..... white loafers... no socks...some hair product..... and last but not least.... A Bren Ten.
Oh, I know. But that at least stands a good chance at missing people entirely, or at least hitting in a non-vital area. Pointed up, that close to the armpit, there's almost no way it won't clip a major pipeline if somebody gets careless with his trigger discipline on the draw.
Well sports fans, it's here, and I did the adjustments, and put one of my 4" L-frames in it and found it very hard to get the gun (unloaded of course--we have to think safety, after all) in. So I looked the side of the holster and thought it looked more like it was made for a Python. I got my Old Model Trooper out of the safe and put it in. It seemed to fit better, so I left it in for a while, and watched The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas with my wife, and after taking the Colt out, I tried another L-frame, and that one went in.
The workmanship seems to be good, but adjusting it to my vast bulk was something of a chore. It seems to conceal very well, and with my draw, it is reasonably fast, just like my old Bianchi.
Admittedly, shoulder holsters are slower than belt holsters, so the bulk of my carrying will be with a belt rig, but for those times when, for various reasons, you can't use a belt holster, a good shoulder rig can be quite useful.
I wish I still had my old Bianchi.
Somehow, having a gun pointed at my axillary and brachial arteries just seems like a bad idea...particularly when I'm carrying it for use under stress.
Just my thinking, though.
I have worse thoughts when I think of appendix carry.
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