Yes. One of the prettiest rifles I own is an old vintage FN Browning Medallion Grade rifle in 308 topped with a vintage Balvar optic. That rifle has been labelled by me more than once as being too pretty to hunt with. But, I did take it on Safari last year and it performed very well, scoring five 1-shot kills without failure. While it may have acquired one or two small dings while bouncing around in the back of the Land Cruiser, it is also true that most of my rifles are more likely to be damaged while being moved around in the safe despite my best efforts to avoid such. To not take them and use them would be to waste their potential and intended purpose.
I will not be taking it to Alaska since there are better tools for that environment and will not take it back to Africa this year only because I need a different tool for that hunt. I will however, be taking what is likely the most beautiful rifle I own with me to Africa this year. It is an ER Shaw custom P14 Enfield in 375HH. While not a Rigby, or other exclusive grade bespoke rifle, it is very close in overall fit, finish and performance. Easily one of the three or four most accurate and precise rifles that I own. It was acquired for this purpose and I trust it will serve me well. Unlike a PH who uses his favorite rifle every day for decades, I will never hunt with it so much that I wear the bluing from the barrel or beat and bang the stock until it has a wonderful patina of much love and hard use. But when I hunt in Africa and similar climates, it will be one of my tool of choice. If I was hunting Elk, Moose, or other NA game in snow or rain, it would likely not be my tool of choice. There are better options out there. My 2 cents.
View attachment 658062View attachment 658063View attachment 658064
I'd say use it up, it's a reliable, functional working tool. Sure, you can spend 3x more on something of 1/10th the quality to "save it from peril" but life is too short to shoot ugly guns. Your gun is better than alternatives that cost more.
An FN, Springfield Sporter, safari grade browning, or a pre-64 winchester is a lot more reliable and a lot higher quality than anything you'd touch at those pricepoints new. None of them are collectible if they have been touched by human hands, lack their box and hang tags, and have never had an optic mounted. They're just classy guns for reasonable money meant to be enjoyed.