Choosing the Best Display Gun Cases for Revolver Collectors

Choosing the Best Display Gun Cases for Revolver Collectors

Riley Stone
Written By
Elena Rodriguez
Reviewed By Elena Rodriguez

Revolver people are a different breed. You are not just stacking polymer duty pistols; you are dealing with blued steel, case-hardening, engraving, and often a century of history. That changes what you should demand from a display case. You are not buying decor. You are selecting a piece of gear that has to protect, secure, and show off irreplaceable metal.

This guide walks through how to choose display cases that are worthy of serious revolver collections, based strictly on real-world practices and specialist advice from custom case builders, security-focused display designers, foam and case manufacturers, and firearm-storage writers. The goal is simple: help you get the best combination of security, preservation, and value for your money, without the fluff.

What Revolver Collectors Actually Need From a Display Case

The minute you move a revolver out of a safe and into a glass-front case, you trade some security for visibility. Writers at Pew Pew Tactical are blunt about that trade: a real gun safe will always beat a display case against determined thieves. Display setups are mainly about keeping kids, guests, and casual smash-and-grab burglars off your guns while letting you enjoy them.

For a revolver collector, that trade has four practical dimensions.

First, you need enough security that you can sleep at night. That means solid locks, glass or plastic that does not shatter at a tap, a frame that does not twist open, and the ability to anchor the case so nobody just picks it up and walks out. Sources focused on secure displays recommend treating the glass as the weak link and backing it up with better materials, internal locks, and even alarms on the doors.

Second, you need real preservation, not just dust control. Revolvers are usually smaller than rifles, but their bluing, nickel, case colors, grips, and engraving are just as vulnerable to humidity, UV light, and poor foam. Case makers and museum-grade display builders emphasize stable temperature, moderate humidity, and UV-safe glass or plastic if you want finishes to look good decades from now.

Third, you need a layout that respects the guns. That means adequate depth for big target grips and long barrels, the ability to cradle the frame without pressure on the cylinder or sights, and padding that will not trap oils or promote rust. Foam specialists point out that the wrong foam and glue can cause more long-term damage than a few dings in the range bag.

Fourth, you need something that fits your life. A single heirloom revolver wants a very different solution from a fifty-gun working collection. Italian manufacturer Technoframes notes that more than 30 percent of American gun owners now have more than five firearms, and they recommend planning display capacity about 20 percent above what you own so you do not outgrow your investment in a year.

If you keep those four needs in mind, the rest of the decision process becomes much more straightforward.

Abstract diagram of key factors for gun display cases: security, preservation, layout, and practicality.

Safety First: Responsible Display, Not Just Showing Off

Plenty of people on gun forums and social media complain about owners who buy firearms mainly to show them off. One widely shared comment summed it up harshly: if your guns are about looking cool and not about safety and responsibility, you are part of the problem. The tone is blunt, but the underlying point is correct. Display does not excuse sloppy storage.

Writers at Pew Pew Tactical drive home a set of baseline rules for any displayed firearm. Guns in a display should be unloaded. Ammunition should be stored separately. If you rely on a firearm for home defense, it should live in a quick-access safe, not in a glass case across the living room. They also recommend trigger locks for every displayed gun, cable locks anchoring arms to the case itself, and a good case lock, plus thoughtful key or combination management. Multi-packs of keyed-alike trigger and cable locks exist precisely because serious owners want this layered approach while keeping things manageable.

A simple motion alarm on the case door and a firm anchor into wall studs or floor structure makes display cases far less attractive to casual thieves. The same article stresses that all the reinforced glass in the world does not help much if someone can pick up the entire cabinet and carry it to a truck.

Some experienced collectors avoid putting guns on display at all. In a discussion on Colt-focused forums, one longtime collector described keeping his firearms in strong safes at both of his homes and only displaying less theft-attractive militaria like helmets, flags, and inert grenades. That is the other end of the spectrum. You do not have to go that far, but his approach is worth keeping in mind when you are deciding how much risk you are willing to accept.

Responsibility also includes documentation. Cheaper Than Dirt’s guidance on cataloging a gun collection lays out a practical process: record manufacturer, model, caliber, serial number, purchase date, price, current estimated value, and any notable accessories or modifications. Photograph each gun from multiple angles, including serial numbers and special markings. Keep receipts, appraisals, and repair records with this log. Store copies in more than one place, such as a printed binder in a safe plus an encrypted digital copy off-site. If a display case full of revolvers is ever stolen or damaged, that level of documentation makes insurance claims and police reports far more effective.

Display should always ride on top of that foundation of secure storage habits and documentation.

Layered security display case for valuable revolver collections.

Once those are handled, you can make informed choices about the type of display case that fits your revolvers and your risk tolerance.

Main Types of Revolver Display Cases

Revolver collectors do not all want the same thing. Some want one heirloom in a wood-and-glass box. Others want a wall of competition wheelguns ready to grab for the next match. The industry and the enthusiast community have evolved several distinct categories of display solutions.

Traditional Glass-Front Cabinets

Glass-front gun cabinets, either free-standing or wall-mounted, are the classic solution most people think of. Companies like CMR Classic Firearms build glass-fronted hardwood cases specifically marketed for gun collections and related items. Their cabinets are hand-made from seasoned walnut or oak, with matching base units available so a display can become a free-standing piece of furniture. Similar cabinets are the “default” display case in many homes.

Display specialists such as VD Showcase describe a mid-range cabinet as a tempered-glass box with a solid wood frame, dual key locks, and LED lighting. This style is often positioned as a best overall choice for many owners because it balances visibility, reasonable security, and price.

The advantages for revolver collectors are obvious. You get a familiar furniture form that can blend with traditional decor, plenty of space for several handguns, and options for interior shelves, stands, and soft linings. Many makers will match the wood species to a desk, bar, or gun-room trim so the case looks intentional rather than bolted on.

The weaknesses are equally clear. Standard tempered glass can be smashed with enough force. Basic key locks on thin doors are an obstacle, not a barrier, to a determined adult. These cabinets do best when paired with the layered security described earlier: trigger and cable locks, anchored frames, better glazing materials, and possibly alarms.

Wall-mounted secure wooden display case showing six revolvers, illuminated for collectors.

Tabletop and Presentation Cases

If your focus is on individual revolvers or small sets, tabletop presentation cases are often the most satisfying option. Custom furniture makers like Wolfkill Woodwork in Georgia build museum-quality pistol display cases using traditional joinery, select hardwoods such as walnut, burl walnut, curly maple, and ebonized oak, and wool felt interiors in more than a hundred colors. Their standard interior display area is about 12.5 inches by 9.25 inches with a price around $1,250, while larger or more complex cases run higher. Typical build times sit around ten to twelve weeks because every piece is made in small batches by hand.

The Wood Gallery in Tennessee offers a similar heirloom approach: American-made handgun cases designed to “tell a story” for retiring officers, prized family handguns, or commemorative gifts. They pair premium woods like American black walnut with microsuede interiors in red, blue, green, black, and other colors, and they add features such as brass hinges, locks, badge inlays, challenge coin holders, and engraved plaques.

On the enthusiast side, experienced woodworkers in communities like LumberJocks share practical construction methods. One widely referenced method suggests using medium density fiberboard or micro plywood to block out the pocket shape of the pistol, wrapping it in velvet or backed felt with spray adhesive, and adding a thin foam underlayer for softness. They stress easing sharp corners on the substrate so the fabric does not wear through, and they avoid putting anything inside the trigger guard to reduce negligent discharge risk if a customer keeps a gun loaded.

This same builder prefers oil finishes on wood inside cases because some gun solvents and oils can soften or even dissolve film finishes like polyurethane and lacquer. They also like hidden layers in the lid held with small magnets to store provenance documents and purchase papers out of sight, and they add discreet neodymium magnets in the gun pocket to keep the revolver from shifting if the case is moved. Flocking is specifically discouraged because it is messy to apply and tends to shed.

Presentation cases like these are ideal for high-value revolvers such as early Colt Single Action Army models, rare Smith and Wesson top breaks, or engraved modern pieces. Rock Island Auction Company’s survey of must-have collectible firearms underscores how much value is tied up in certain revolvers, from Civil War Colts to scarce contract guns. A hand-built hardwood case with museum glass, wool felt, precise inletting, and a real lock is a proportionate investment for that level of hardware.

Engraved antique revolver in a velvet-lined wooden display gun case, ideal for collectors.

In-Wall and Concealed Displays

For collectors who want to display revolvers yet keep them out of sight at will, in-wall cases are a strong option. Pew Pew Tactical describes in-wall gun displays as essentially cabinets built into the wall cavity. They usually require cutting through drywall and avoiding wiring and plumbing, so either good carpentry skills or a contractor are needed, but the payoff is meaningful.

In-wall displays have two major advantages over free-standing cabinets. There is only one accessible side, which removes a lot of the leverage that a thief has with a cabinet they can walk around. And the entire display can disappear behind a painting or mirror when you do not want visitors to see it. When open, you get a recessed, framed view of your revolvers on stands or rails. When closed, an outsider has no idea anything is there.

Hand opening hidden display gun case with revolvers and ammo on illuminated shelves.

These designs still share the glass vulnerability of regular cases. Without upgraded glass or plastic and strong locks, a hard strike on the visible panel still defeats the system. However, for revolver owners who want a subdued, built-in look, they are hard to beat.

Related to this, display companies like VD Showcase highlight “hidden in plain sight” commercial systems where gun cabinets are embedded flush with walls and covered with paneling or other finishes. The concept is similar: one-sided access, structural integration, and optional concealment.

Open Racks and Weapon Rooms

At the other end of the spectrum from glass boxes is the dedicated weapon room. Holdup Displays, which builds modular steel gun-wall systems, defines a weapon room as a securable, climate-controlled space outfitted with wall-mounted racks instead of cramped safes. They argue that open gun walls in a controlled room can actually be better for firearms than safes that trap humidity, especially when owners forget to maintain dehumidifiers.

A typical revolver-friendly setup would use steel pegboard-style panels or specifically cut handgun racks fixed into studs. Holdup Displays points out that steel panels are much stronger than pressboard and can be rearranged as the collection grows. This kind of room should still have a stout vault door with a recognized burglary rating and adequate fire protection, as high-end display firms recommend for commercial gun rooms.

Pew Pew Tactical also shows how open shelving with felt-lined surfaces and prop rods can give a “gun shop” look for handguns. One of their writers uses boltless metal shelving with MDF boards wrapped in felt and pistol prop rods to hold handguns at an angle. They report using this system for about eight years, including a move between houses, with no sagging shelves or damage to guns. That kind of approach is inexpensive and flexible, but it must be combined with tight room security because the guns themselves are basically open-air.

A weapon room approach makes sense for collectors with large, actively used revolver collections who want fast access for range days or competition and who are willing to invest in the room itself as the security container.

Extensive revolver collection displayed in a secure gun safe room with pegboard cases and cabinetry.

Smart and Domotic Display Cases

High-end manufacturers now offer smart display cases that blur the line between gun safe and art installation. Technoframes, an Italian maker, builds domotic display cases that combine aluminum frames, tempered glass, LED lighting, motorized opening, and advanced locks such as biometric readers and RFID. They emphasize sealed gaskets, high-density custom-cut foam, and quality materials like wood and leather to make the cases both protective and decorative.

VD Showcase describes broader trends in this direction: multi-factor smart cases that combine biometric entry, keypads, and smartphone control, and museum-grade displays with humidity and temperature control plus UV-filtering glass. Conservation guidelines they cite aim for roughly 50 percent relative humidity and about 70°F to keep metal and wood stable, combined with UV glass that blocks up to 99 percent of ultraviolet light.

These systems are not cheap. Technoframes positions its classic gun cases roughly in the $400 to $1,200 band, with domotic displays in the $1,500 to $5,000 range, and custom ammunition boxes and replica displays filling in between. They argue that over a ten-year span, superior durability, better security, and potential insurance discounts in the five to ten percent range can make the cost make sense for large or high-value collections.

For a revolver collector with engraved Colts, limited-run custom Smith and Wessons, or historically important pieces, a smart display case that locks itself, reports events, and quietly preserves the environment can be a rational upgrade rather than a luxury toy.

Futuristic, illuminated display case with security and climate control, ideal for valuable collectibles.

Core Features That Actually Matter

Once you know the general style of display that fits your situation, the gear-veteran way to shop is by features, not marketing adjectives. Several technical details consistently separate good revolver display solutions from the junk.

Security and Locking

Every serious source on displays agrees that the lock on the case itself is only one layer. Pew Pew Tactical recommends sturdy case locks that cannot be cut with basic bolt cutters, plus trigger locks on every firearm in the case and cable locks that tie guns to the display. Packs of keyed-alike or same-combination locks make this practical so you are not juggling a dozen different keys.

VD Showcase, which reviews commercial display cases, ranks security features by how they handle forced entry. Basic tumbler key locks with encased lock bodies are an acceptable baseline for personal use, but higher security applications turn to biometric locks, multi-point locking mechanisms that secure the door on several sides, and fully welded steel frames that resist prying.

On the high end, products like the Fortress Armory Vault described by VD Showcase use multi-layer laminated, bullet-resistant glass, reinforced steel frames, and multi-point locks certified to recognized ballistic and forced-entry standards. That level of construction is probably excessive for a typical revolver cabinet in a private home, but it sets the benchmark for what “serious” means in a commercial context.

At a minimum, a revolver display case should have a real lock built into a solid door frame, provisions to bolt the unit to wall studs or the floor, and compatibility with internal trigger and cable locks.

Cross-section of a secure display gun case showing hardened steel, laminated glass, and multi-point lock security.

Anything less is decor, not gear.

Case Materials and Frames

The structure of the case matters just as much as the visible glass or wood. Sun Case Supply, which tests gun case durability, finds that aluminum-framed cases outperform plastic for long-term rigidity, impact resistance, and professional-grade protection. Aluminum frames and composite panels resist warping and can take rough handling, while plastics like ABS and polypropylene are lighter and cheaper but can crack or deform under heavy loads or extreme cold.

Technoframes leans on aluminum alloys for exactly that strength-to-weight ratio in their cases, combining them with glass and wood finishes. Display case makers like CMR Classic Firearms and custom shops such as Wolfkill Woodwork and The Wood Gallery favor select hardwoods for their cabinets and boxes, both for structural stiffness and for aesthetics.

Plastic-framed display cases and very thin DIY glass-front shadow boxes might work for inexpensive decor, but they are usually a poor match for heavy steel revolvers. A good rule is that the frame should be at least as robust as the firearms it holds. For cabinets, that means hardwood or steel with strong joinery or welds. For portable cases, it means aluminum or reinforced plastic of a type proven in rifle and instrument cases, not bargain-bin blow-molded shells.

Glass and Clear Panels

The panel between your revolvers and the outside world is where most display cases either earn or lose their keep.

VD Showcase’s article on glass options lays out the basics. Tempered glass is stronger than standard glass and breaks into small, relatively dull chunks when shattered, which is good for safety but not especially resistant to a determined attack. Laminated glass, which sandwiches a plastic interlayer between glass sheets, resists penetration much better and is far harder to smash through. For high-security displays, multi-layer laminated or even bullet-resistant glass is the gold standard.

Plastic alternatives include acrylic and polycarbonate. Acrylic is lighter than glass and reasonably impact-resistant, but polycarbonate is where real toughness shows up. The article notes that polycarbonate can reach impact resistance many times higher than glass, which is why some high-duty wall cases and floating mounts for rifles use it. Polycarbonate is also lighter, which matters when you bolt a case to drywall.

Museum-grade makers like Wolfkill Woodwork go a step farther with ultra-clear, low-reflection glass that both brightens colors and blocks up to 99 percent of UV light. VD Showcase also highlights low-iron glass for almost colorless clarity and UV-protective glass for reducing finish fading.

Pew Pew Tactical adds an advanced option: suspended particle device smart glass. This technology sandwiches a layer of nanoparticles between two sheets of glass or plastic so that you can switch between clear and opaque, control glare, and reduce heat transfer. In a revolver context, smart glass lets you hide expensive guns behind what appears to be a plain cabinet or coffee table most of the time, then reveal them at will.

For a revolver collector, the practical approach is straightforward.

Secure display gun case materials: tempered glass, laminated glass, and polycarbonate.

If you are building or buying a serious case, aim for laminated glass or polycarbonate rather than plain tempered glass. If the guns are high-value or you are dealing with direct sunlight, pay attention to UV protection and low-reflection coatings. If stealth matters, smart glass or creative concealment behind decor are worth considering.

Interior Foam, Lining, and Layout

The exterior keeps people out. The interior keeps your revolvers alive.

Foam manufacturer UWK stresses that interior foam does three jobs: it absorbs shock, prevents guns from shifting, and in the right formulation helps manage moisture rather than trapping it. Their cases use a mix of convoluted “egg crate” foam and a rigid, closed-cell cross-linked polyethylene core to hold pistols and gear in place. Cross-linked polyethylene foam is firm, non-staining, and does not absorb moisture, which makes it ideal for long-term storage of firearms. UWK specifically warns that cheaper open-cell polyurethane foam absorbs oils and solvents, can hold moisture against metal, and tends to lose shape over time. They also discourage high resilience, rebond, memory, latex, and similar foams for serious gun storage.

They pair the foam with desiccant cartridges and non-corrosive adhesives to further reduce rust risk. That combination is a good template for revolver displays. The foam should be closed-cell, firm enough that a heavy revolver does not sink to the bottom, and cut to the shape of the gun. Glue should be chosen with firearms in mind, not whatever is cheapest at the craft store.

The LumberJocks case builder’s advice complements this. They like a thin foam underlayer under velvet or felt in inserts for comfort and appearance, but they pay careful attention to materials and edges so the fabric does not wear through. They explicitly avoid spraying adhesives or finishes that might react with gun chemicals. They also avoid putting inserts into trigger guards and prefer to add finger cutouts and beveled edges so users can lift pistols and magazines without prying.

For revolvers, interior layout needs to consider barrel length, sight style, and grip size. Large target grips, high front sights, and long barrels need more clearance than a compact snub nose. Technoframes recommends matching internal configuration closely to firearm dimensions and even optics in their general guidance; that principle applies here. Revolvers should sit in cradles or on stands that touch durable parts of the frame and leave cylinders, hammers, and sights free from pressure.

Soft linings matter as much as foam. Wool felt, quality velvet, or microsuede all work well if properly supported, whereas cheap fuzzy fabric that drinks up adhesive and oil does not. Custom shops like Wolfkill Woodwork and The Wood Gallery lean heavily on wool felt and high-grade microsuede for a reason: they look right with traditional revolvers and hold up over time.

Environmental Control and Preservation

Environment is where many display solutions quietly fail. VD Showcase’s conservation guidelines for professional displays recommend keeping showcases around 50 percent relative humidity and about 70°F, paired with UV-filtering glass and LED lighting that does not put out much heat. Holdup Displays emphasizes that climate control is critical in a dedicated gun room, both for modern finishes and for more delicate blued steel and walnut stocks.

Technoframes builds sealed gaskets and sturdy frames into their cases so that attached dehumidifiers and desiccants can actually do their job. UWK includes desiccant cartridges with their hard cases. These are simple, proven tools for revolver preservation too.

For a revolver collector, the basic regiment is clear. Use sealed or at least tight-fitting cases where possible. Add desiccant or a small dehumidifier to larger cabinets. Avoid exposing cases to direct sunlight or near HVAC vents that swing temperature and humidity wildly. Choose LED lighting over hot halogen or incandescent strips inside cases. And check your guns periodically; even in a case, revolvers benefit from wiping down and inspection.

When you get into four- or five-figure collectible revolvers, it becomes reasonable to consider museum-grade cases with active humidity control, or to place presentation cases inside a larger climate-controlled safe or room.

Collector's vintage revolver in a display gun case with humidity monitor.

Matching Cases to Your Revolver Collection and Budget

Once you understand the technical pieces, you can map case types to real-world collector profiles and priorities. The table below lays out practical combinations, drawing on the ranges and recommendations described by Technoframes, VD Showcase, custom case makers, and enthusiast builders.

Collector profile

Typical collection

Primary goals

Recommended display approach

Why it fits

New or budget-conscious revolver owner

Two to five modern revolvers, mixed use

Basic display in living space, low cost, decent safety

Small tempered-glass or acrylic cabinet with lock, plus trigger and cable locks on guns; consider a single mid-range cabinet like the wood-and-glass styles reviewed by display specialists

Gets revolvers behind glass with a real lock without overspending; layered locks and anchored frame cover most household risks

Working shooter with growing collection

Five to fifteen revolvers, frequent range use

Fast access, organization, some display, practical cost

Felt-lined boltless shelving with prop rods in a lockable room or large cabinet; consider modular steel pegboard handgun racks combined with a sturdy door and alarm

Open racks and shelves keep guns handy and visible; security lives at the room level with a vault-style door and alarms

Heirloom and commemorative owner

One to three high-sentiment or retirement revolvers

Storytelling, presentation, moderate security

Custom hardwood tabletop case from a shop like The Wood Gallery or Wolfkill Woodwork, with wool or microsuede lining, brass or steel lock, and custom engraving or badge inlays

Puts the focus on the story and the specific revolver; quality materials, good lock, and careful interior layout protect both finish and meaning

Historical or high-value collector

Multiple antique Colts, Smith and Wessons, or rare contract guns

Preservation, documentation, insurance, high security

Museum-grade cabinet or smart domotic case with laminated or bullet-resistant glass, biometric or multi-point lock, UV protection, controlled environment; detailed documented inventory stored separately

Matches the value level of the guns with security and conservation; simplifies insurance discussions and estate planning

Retailer or home showroom builder

Mixed handguns and long guns for business or display

Brand image, customer access, liability management

Professionally designed displays like those described by VD Showcase, with UL-rated vault doors, smart cases, steel wall systems, and explicit legal compliance; often a dedicated gun room

Combines fast access with layered security in a way that protects both assets and business reputation

These are patterns, not rigid boxes. You might have a mix of profiles under one roof: everyday revolvers on felt-lined shelves in a weapon room, a single fancy Colt in an heirloom case in the office, and the truly irreplaceable pieces in a safer, more hidden setup.

The main point is to let the collection drive the case, not the other way around. A $200 revolver does not need a $2,000 smart case. A rare wartime contract revolver absolutely deserves more than an unanchored glass curio cabinet in a sunny hallway.

Documenting Your Revolvers and Cases for Insurance

Display cases change your risk footprint, so they should also change how you handle documentation and insurance.

Following the practices outlined by Cheaper Than Dirt, you should maintain an inventory that covers every revolver and its storage. That means manufacturer, model, caliber, serial number, purchase date, cost, and current estimated value. It also means noting which case each gun lives in and where that case sits in your home. Photographs of each revolver and the overall display help tell the story to your insurer or the police if something ever goes wrong.

Keep receipts for both guns and display cases, plus any appraisals, in a folder that is stored in a safe place. Make at least one redundant copy of your inventory, whether that is a printout in a safe or an encrypted digital file stored off-site. Estate planning is easier when heirs have a clear list of what exists, roughly what it is worth, and how it is stored.

Insurers look favorably on secure storage. Technoframes notes that some major carriers offer five to ten percent premium reductions when owners can show high-quality safes or secure gun rooms and good inventory practices. Properly installed domotic display cases and vault doors can be part of that story. Even if your revolvers live in glass-front cabinets, being able to explain the locks, anchoring, alarms, and documentation puts you in a better position than someone who shrugs and says the guns were “just in a cabinet.”

Short FAQ for Revolver Display Cases

Should I ever display loaded revolvers?

Every serious storage article referenced here assumes displayed guns are unloaded. Pew Pew Tactical specifically recommends storing firearms unloaded and keeping ammunition separate, even when using reinforced glass and multiple locks. If a revolver is part of your home-defense plan, keep that particular gun in a quick-access safe rather than in a display case.

Is a glass-front cabinet enough security on its own?

For most households, a basic wood-and-glass cabinet with a simple key lock is not enough by itself. Display specialists and security-focused writers agree you should treat the cabinet as just one layer. Add trigger locks, cable locks tying guns to the case, and either laminated glass or polycarbonate where possible. Anchor the cabinet to the wall or floor and consider adding a door alarm. Think of the cabinet as part of a secure system, not the whole system.

Do I really need expensive foam and linings for revolvers?

If you care about long-term condition, the answer is effectively yes. UWK’s foam guidance and experienced case builders both warn that cheap open-cell foam and random adhesives can trap oils, wick moisture, and eventually damage finishes. Closed-cell foams like cross-linked polyethylene, quality wool felt or microsuede, and non-corrosive glues cost more up front but last longer and treat your revolvers better. For a display that you expect to live with for many years, that is a sensible investment.

When you think like a gear veteran, you stop seeing display cases as furniture and start seeing them as protective equipment that happens to look good. Match the case to the guns, layer your security, respect the environment inside the box, and document everything. Do that, and your revolvers will still look right when the next generation opens the case.

References

  1. https://scholarshare.temple.edu/bitstreams/fc4bf0b7-8412-4418-8a9d-0888ec3e71b1/download
  2. https://forum.cartridgecollectors.org/t/how-do-you-display-your-collection/38759?page=3
  3. https://www.cmrfirearms.com/display-cases-display-case-order-p-755.html
  4. https://forums.sassnet.com/index.php?/topic/343924-making-a-pistol-case/
  5. https://blog.cheaperthandirt.com/how-to-document-your-gun-collection/
  6. https://eagleshows.com/the-beginners-guide-to-collecting-firearms/
  7. https://www.pewpewtactical.com/secure-ways-to-display-your-guns/
  8. https://www.rockislandauction.com/riac-blog/gun-collection-must-haves
  9. https://www.sfdisplay.com/collections/gun-display-cases?srsltid=AfmBOoqkVmiFgDV1ffSVDyKPK6q9PqK9Kc0fcN9J6Wl9xdpGMYul9N4h
  10. https://technoframes.com/the-ultimate-guide-to-choosing-technoframes-gun-cases-options-materials-security-and-more/
About Riley Stone
Practical Gear Specialist Tactical Value Analyst

Meet Riley Riley Stone isn't interested in brand hype. As a pragmatic gear specialist, he focuses on one thing: performance per dollar. He field-tests Dulce Dom’s tactical line to ensure you get professional-grade durability without the inflated price tag. If it doesn't hold up, it doesn't get listed.