I DO like the pictures! The style of the engraving seems kind of 'primitive" or "Folk Art" but I admire anyone with that level of skill, and I don't like the "Best Gun" level of engraving that you see on English doubles and other high-end firearms much. There's something wrong, IMO, when the decorations cost more than the gun itself....and both cost more that a Ford 150! I admire the engraving skill itself, but not on a gun. Guns are to shoot. And some of the Italian guns I've seen were plainly and simply pornographic, however well-executed.
Again, great skill but executed in the wrong place.
Most American gun engravers of the past were from a Germanic tradition and made bolder, simpler "scratchings." I prefer those, although I've seen both German and Austrian guns that were over-decorated.
One of the reasons I like the 219/220 series, and Savages in general, is that they seemed to focus on the "form follows function" principal and make guns anyone could afford. Both good foundations for American gunmaking.