Colt Python Timeline
Custom Shop Period: Collector Summary
The Colt Python’s Custom Shop period is not a single neat date. The transition began in 1997, when published histories describe Python manufacture moving from Colt’s main assembly line to the Colt Custom Shop and the Python Elite name appearing. By 1998, American Rifleman describes the only cataloged Python as the Colt Custom Gun Shop Python Elite with a 6-inch barrel and brushed stainless finish; by 1999, Royal Blue had joined brushed stainless in the catalog discussion.
For the stricter phrase “Custom Shop-only production”, collectors usually mean the short tail after regular Python production ended and only limited Custom Gun Shop or special-order revolvers remained. Museum and modern collector references commonly close that first-generation story at 2005, while some Python histories describe limited Elite production as running off and on through 2004.
When Were Pythons Produced Only by the Custom Shop?
The best collector answer is: the Python became a Custom Shop/Python Elite product in 1997, was effectively the only cataloged Python by 1998, and survived after the 1999 regular-production discontinuation as a limited Custom Gun Shop/special-order revolver until about 2004-2005.
That wording keeps the evidence straight. A 1998 Python Elite belongs to the Custom Gun Shop catalog era. A 2003 Python Elite belongs to the post-regular-production Custom Shop-only tail. A claimed 2005 example should be handled as a final-era or special documented gun unless factory records show exactly how it left Colt.
| Period | Production status | Collector interpretation |
|---|---|---|
| Before 1997 | Standard first-generation Python production remained the normal path, although Colt also performed special editions, engraving, and Custom Shop-type work on individual guns. | Do not call every pre-1997 special or engraved Python part of the Custom Shop-only era. Earlier examples must be judged by their own serial era, finish, barrel length, and factory records. |
| 1997 | Python manufacture moved from the main assembly line to the Colt Custom Shop; the late model was renamed the Colt Python Elite. | This is the practical start of the Custom Shop/Python Elite era. The Python Elite rollmark, case, finish, and paperwork become key identifiers. |
| April 15, 1997 | A factory-lettered PE00001 example is documented as the first production serialized Python Elite, shipped in a 10-gun shipment with .357 Magnum/.38 Special chambering, 6-inch barrel, Royal Blue finish, and grips not listed. | PE00001 shows why factory letters matter. Shipment date, destination, configuration, finish, and serial number can all be part of the collector record. |
| 1998 | The only cataloged Python was the Colt Custom Gun Shop Python Elite, described by American Rifleman as a 6-inch brushed-stainless revolver. | This is strong support for saying Python catalog availability had narrowed to the Custom Gun Shop/Elite format by 1998. |
| 1999 | Royal Blue was cataloged alongside brushed stainless for the Python Elite, and October 1999 is widely cited as Colt’s end-of-regular-production announcement for the Python. | This is the key cutoff for the stricter “Custom Shop-only after regular production” phrase. Distinguish catalog availability from the public discontinuation announcement. |
| 2000-2003 | Limited Custom Shop/Python Elite examples continued to appear. Auction records document 2003 Python Elite revolvers with 6-inch stainless configuration and original Colt plastic case. | Documentation is central. Confirm the rollmark, case, stocks, finish, serial range, and factory letter before making final-era or rarity claims. |
| 2004 | Some histories describe Python Elite production as limited and intermittent until 2004. | Use cautious wording such as “limited production through about 2004” when describing the practical end of Elite production. |
| 2005 | Museum and modern collector references commonly state that limited Custom Gun Shop production ceased in 2005; Guns & Ammo describes Colt Custom Shop cessation of first-generation Python production in 2005. | Use 2005 for the broad close of the original first-generation Python story, especially for final-era or anniversary discussions. |
| 2020 and later | Colt reintroduced the Python as a redesigned second-generation revolver. | Modern Python, Target Python, and Python Combat Elite models are separate from the original Custom Shop/Python Elite period. |
What “Custom Shop Only” Means
In this context, “Custom Shop only” does not mean every late Python was engraved, one-of-one, or built with exotic options. It means the original production-line Python had narrowed into limited Custom Shop or special-order availability. Many late revolvers still look like familiar Pythons: ventilated-rib full-underlug barrels, adjustable sights, six-shot .357 Magnum cylinders, and the old Colt double-action lockwork.
The Python Elite name is the major late-period cue, but it is not a substitute for documentation. A late stainless or Royal Blue revolver may look straightforward in photos, while its value and description depend on the rollmark, finish, stocks, case, label, and factory letter. This is why the Custom Shop period is a documentation-driven collecting chapter.
Use 1997 for the broad Custom Shop/Python Elite transition.
By 1998, the cataloged Python was the Colt Custom Gun Shop Python Elite.
Use 1999-2005 for the limited Custom Gun Shop-only period after regular production ended.
2004 appears in some production histories; 2005 appears in museum and first-generation endpoint references.
Python Elite Features and Verification Points
- Rollmark: The Python Elite barrel marking is the clearest visible clue, but it should be supported by paperwork.
- Finish: Brushed stainless and Royal Blue are both important late-period finishes. Do not confuse Royal Blue, bright stainless, matte stainless, nickel, or refinished metal.
- Barrel length: The 6-inch Elite is the strongest catalog anchor; 4-inch Elite examples are documented in auction records, so the individual gun must be checked.
- Stocks: Late examples are often seen with laminated or finger-groove stocks. Stocks are replaceable, so treat them as supporting evidence.
- Case and paperwork: Original Colt cases, labels, manuals, and factory letters can materially affect confidence and value.
- Serial lookup: Colt’s own serial-number lookup is approximate and not a substitute for definitive documentation.
Why the Cutoff Is Often Confused
Collectors encounter 1997, 1998, 1999, 2003, 2004, 2005, and even 2007 in Python discussions because those dates refer to different things. One date may describe the move to the Custom Shop, another the catalog listing, another the regular-production discontinuation announcement, another a documented auction example, another the practical end of Elite production, and another the broad disappearance of Colt double-action revolvers from the catalog.
For this page, the clean language is: 1997 begins the Custom Shop/Python Elite era; 1998 confirms the narrowed Custom Gun Shop catalog position; 1999 is the regular-production discontinuation marker; 2004-2005 closes the remaining original-generation Custom Shop/special-order story.
How to Caption or List a Custom Shop-Period Python
A good caption should say exactly what is known and how it is known. “1999 Colt Python Elite, 4-inch stainless, laminate stocks, original Colt hard case” is stronger than “rare Custom Shop Python.” Likewise, “2003 Python Elite, 6-inch stainless, Colt plastic case, archive letter recommended” is more useful than forcing the revolver into a broad date range without supporting records.
When documentation is incomplete, use careful wording such as “consistent with,” “reported as,” or “requires Colt Archive confirmation.” A revolver can be a legitimate late Custom Shop-period Python and still lack its original case, paperwork, or stocks. Conversely, a complete boxed and lettered Python Elite can be more compelling than a visually similar example with no paper trail.
How This Page Fits the Timeline
This page bridges the 1980s production-change chapter and the discontinuation chapter. The 1980s introduced stainless options, long-barrel packages, and specialized variants; the Custom Shop period explains how the first-generation Python narrowed into limited late production before the line disappeared and later returned in redesigned form.
The Colt Custom Shop period helped keep the Python name alive among serious collectors after regular production had faded. For serial-number dating, production history, engineering changes, barrel configurations, and collector identification details across all Python eras, see the complete Colt Python serial number and identification guide.
Research Sources Used
This page was revised from a short launch draft into a collector reference page using cross-checked secondary history, museum notes, auction documentation, Colt documentation cautions, and late-production examples. For final publication or purchase evaluation, verify individual revolvers against Colt Archive letters, factory catalogs, box labels, and period-correct examples whenever a claim involves rarity, Custom Shop production, finish, or shipment details.
- Handguns Magazine: Colt Python complete history
- American Rifleman: A Colt’s Python Primer
- NRA National Firearms Museum: Colt Python
- Guns & Ammo: The Colt Python Family
- Rock Island Auction: First production serialized Python Elite, PE00001
- Rock Island Auction: 1999 Python Elite with case
- Rock Island Auction: 2003 Python Elite with case
- Colt serial-number lookup and documentation caution
- Colt Archive Services: factory letter guidance
- Colt Fever: Python variants and late-production notes
- Gun Collectors Club: Colt Python serial number tables