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Rayban

Horsehide Gun Belt Opinions Wanted....

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I've been making my horsehide belts from two layers of horsehide.....but in doing some more research on them, I see that some belt makers use one layer or horse, along with one layer of cow.

My feeling on it is if someone wants a horsehide belt, it should be all horse hide, not this half and half business......but I haven't heard a good reason for the contrary.

Your thoughts on this would be appreciated.

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Rayban

i agree with yu if some one wants horse hide work then so be it in my opinion horse hide is pretty tuff stuff and can take a lot of abuse and it seems to mold great for like holsters and things like that

so i say keep doing your fine work

Tim (Cowboy316)

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I've been making my horsehide belts from two layers of horsehide.....but in doing some more research on them, I see that some belt makers use one layer or horse, along with one layer of cow.

My feeling on it is if someone wants a horsehide belt, it should be all horse hide, not this half and half business......but I haven't heard a good reason for the contrary.

Your thoughts on this would be appreciated.

I gotta agree buddy.....if a customer of mine orders something that specifically states in my description that it consists of a large chunk of 'Great Grey-green Greasy Limpopo'...well, he gets a large chunk of Great Grey-green Greasy Limpopo. It's only the proper thing to do..,.Kinda like 'hand sewn' items.....to me that doesn't mean that an operator fed the leather into the foot of a machine. To me that means my old awl, two needles, a piece of thread and (for me) a pair of smooth jawed pliers. I say sell what you advertise and honestly describe it. Mike

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Cowboy!!!...GREAT to hear from you again!!!!

My main reason for posting this was to see if there was good reason why 2 layers of horsehide just wasn't needed....counter productive....overkill.....to expensive.....causes a rash........what ever.

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Sorry for the late post on this, I have been away from a computer for the last week. I work predominately in Horsehide, but for belts I do use Hermann Oak for my base layer. The reason I do it has to do with thickness and consistency. I like using hard rolled Horsehide and I find the thicker weights can have a lot of surface imperfections. Soft rolled, is nice in the heavier weights, but just doesn't seem to stiffen up enough. So, I use 8oz leather for the base and then hard rolled 6oz Horsehide on top. If I do Shark, I still use the layer of horsehide though. That's pretty much my main reason for doing it.

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