Shawn,
Finishing is always a matter of personal taste, but all kinds of possibilities are open with these because of the BB ply (which I think looks fine finished natrural, but can also be a lot of work, especially if using an oil finish on the end grain sections. Wipe-on poly also works well, as does veneering -- I veneered my last pair of Horn Shoppe horns with australian lacewood and they came out beautifully and now live with a neighbor who loves them. because the construction is not done with bevel joints and the eend grain is exposed, a good bit of sanding prep will be needed, and you should stick with paperback veneer and contact cement or a vacuum press and cold press glue -- raw veneer and heatlok glues will probably not hold up as well.
If painting, try to use one of the textured paints -- also because of the exposed end grain -- as the wood shrinks and swells, the textured paints will telegraph the seams much less than a glossy or even semi gloss paint.
All up to you, of course. but I think the textured paint can look really good on these and I'd probably do my pair in red instead of black, and Debk would probably do hers in purple :-). For me, a stain annd wipe-on poly would probably be the next choice -- all depending on the room it is likely to be used in.
My eldest neice will be 11 in January, which means the following year she will get her first stereo from uncle Jim, and these are looking like a very likely pair of speakers for her -- now I just have to find out what her favorite color is :-).
Thanks for the update and glad to hear they're doing so well.
-- Jim
Jim Rebman -- recovering audiophile
Equitech balanced power; uRendu, USB processor -> Musette DAC -> 5670 tube buffer -> Finale Audio F138 FFX -> Cain and Cain Abbys near-field).
s.e.x. 2.1 under construction. Want list: Stereomour II
All ICs homemade (speaker and power next)