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Basically Bob

Saddle Stitch Origins?

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I am curious to know the origins of the saddle stitch. Have searched this forum with no luck .... Is there anyone here that has this info?

Edited by Basically Bob

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A saddle stitch is a slanted ////// two dimensional (sits flat on top of the leather in corect form) decorative stitch its use became more predominant with the advent of sewing machines which could initially only sew straight ------ some used the saddle stitch to give a visual indication that the item was hand stitched, hence the popular myth that hand stitching is slanted, I'm unsure what Country or what trade it originated but I suspect it's French it's certainly not traditional English. The traditional English stitch is straight pricked up stitching also in popular western saddlery to this day, pricking up is rounding the stitches to give a three a dimensional pees in the pod look by the correct use of an over stitch wheel or with a pricker by placing the pricker in the stitch hole and rounding the stitches individually hence the term pricking up.

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I can't tell you the REAL origins of what we call the saddle stitch, so I"m gonna make something up.

Some guy, somewhere, had to make a saddle. He stitched it by hand, slowly and carefully. In the end, he had made a thing of beauty, and in the process developed a simply yet attractive stitching pattern. The king liked it so much, he called the saddler to ask what this wonderful method was called. The poor leather goods maker, not knowing what to call it, and VERY nervous, simply said, "It's a saddle stitch, Your Highness." And thus was born a long tradition of hand sewing with angled holes, two needles, one thread, and lots of questions. (Legend and/or rumor has it that the name of the gent that made the saddle was "Nigel", but there is no proof.)

Now, if you ever DO find the REAL story, let me know. Otherwise, I'm sticking with my story :)

(Do I need to mention that my post is almost all in fun? I really don't know the answer to your question, but my story is as likely as ony other, right? )

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I read this to my children and they fell fast asleep lovely bed time story . :spoton:

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Glad I could be of service. :thumbsup:

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Awesome!

I'm in a bedtime story!!!

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I think he was refering to Nigel Hawthorne LOL

Cheers

Zip

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I am curious to know the origins of the saddle stitch. Have searched this forum with no luck .... Is there anyone here that has this info?

I am sure that the origins of the stitch are nearly as far back in history as the idea to first use leather to make footwear and clothing. The name "saddle stitch" itself probably dates back nearly to when people first made saddles, and of course that is also thousands of years in the past.

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Oh, WOW! I had forgotten about this thread! AWESOME!

Awesome!

I'm in a bedtime story!!!

^this is correct. At least it is in my made up story :)

I think he was refering to Nigel Hawthorne LOL

Cheers

Zip

^Nope, was refering to Dangerous Beans.

Take care, guys :)

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On a more serious note... I think WyomingSlick has it right, this stitch is as old as saddles.

Much like the bow and arrow, no one culture can clam its invention, and no one person can be attributed to its development.

Skills were very guarded so the secrecy around noteworthy saddlers skills hampered the recording of methods.

I have had many conversations with re-enacters who say that leatherwork was quite crude and the saddle stitch would not have been around in the Middle Ages.

I disagree, having seen some of the work dug up over the years in metal, I think artisans in the Middle Ages had a phenomenal range of skills, we just don't have proof because leather does not last that long. There is no reason do doubt the saddle stitch had been around for a very long time.

I think the development of tools such as the awl and pricking irons which in the scheme of things are fairly recent, and of course the needle have contributed to a more consistent and neater stitch, but only as a progression of an existing method.

But... And more importantly! I'm in a story!

Nige

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Oh, WOW! I had forgotten about this thread! AWESOME!

^this is correct. At least it is in my made up story :)

^Nope, was refering to Dangerous Beans.

Take care, guys :)

Doh!! :rolleyes:

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Thank you, for your thoughts and input!

Much appreciated.

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On a more serious note... I think WyomingSlick has it right, this stitch is as old as saddles.

Much like the bow and arrow, no one culture can clam its invention, and no one person can be attributed to its development.

Skills were very guarded so the secrecy around noteworthy saddlers skills hampered the recording of methods.

I have had many conversations with re-enacters who say that leatherwork was quite crude and the saddle stitch would not have been around in the Middle Ages.

I disagree, having seen some of the work dug up over the years in metal, I think artisans in the Middle Ages had a phenomenal range of skills, we just don't have proof because leather does not last that long. There is no reason do doubt the saddle stitch had been around for a very long time.

I think the development of tools such as the awl and pricking irons which in the scheme of things are fairly recent, and of course the needle have contributed to a more consistent and neater stitch, but only as a progression of an existing method.

But... And more importantly! I'm in a story!

Nige

Very much agree with Nigel on this. (Bummer, I'm being serious now. That's gonna ruin my reputation!) To any that would say that back in the middle ages leatherwork was crude, I'd say "Prove it". Sure, there was probably alot of crude stuff out there. The poor farmer trying to just get enough to feed his family probably wasn't a trained leathersmith, but I'd be willing to bet he did what he could to make leather stuff he needed, rather than try to buy it. But the royalty and wealthy? THEY wanted the good stuff. My bet is that the great leathersmiths, you know, the guys that guarded their secrets well, produced AMAZING leather items. And not just saddles, either. So, my story COULD have a bearing of truth in it.

Oh, and Nige is in a STORY! We can't forget that :) But, uh, yeah...that's all.

Michael

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I suppose it is going to depend on what you call a saddle stitch. You know saddle stitching is nothing but a running stitch that has been doubled. If fact, some do a saddle stitch by doing a running stitch one way and then simply coming back the other way to finish. Seems to me that such a simple concept would have been used way back by our ancestors to double the strength of a running stitch.

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Hi Dangerous Beans

Umm.... Beg to differ.....no offense but awls are ancient, check this out!

http://www.primitiveways.com/Iceman.html

Cheers, Toolingaround

Not sure what you're differing with?

I know awls are ancient, but not as you see them today, there are some very fine examples found in bone.

I was referring to the development, not the invention.

Nige

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Hi Dangerous Beans

Guess I read it wrong, sorry

Cheers, Toolingaround

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I have had many conversations with re-enacters who say that leatherwork was quite crude and the saddle stitch would not have been around in the Middle Ages.

You're definitely right Nigel. You can tell them they aren't looking in the right museums then!

Here are some museum examples that appear to be saddle-stitched, or maybe just double-running stitch. I think these all are early to late Medieval.

http://www.bunrattycollection.com/search.php?i=138

http://www.bunrattycollection.com/search.php?i=140

http://www.bunrattycollection.com/search.php?i=146

As for crude? Well, yeah. When you consider that the average person wouldn't have a lot of access to tools and didn't have the leisure to learn to make things at the epitome of the art unless they were masters or journeymen of that craft--and those items would have been made for and owned by the wealthy. In a situation like that, good enough was often as good as it got for day-to-day items for the average schmoe.

You should remind them that what remains for history often is recovered from garbage pits or battlefields, where animals, microbes, and the weather would have caused havoc on anything organic. Nothing organic looks pretty or well made after being chewed on or worn out to the point of being deemed non-salvageable and then thrown somewhere nasty to fester for hundreds of years.

edit: This too: http://www.historiclife.com/pdf/flasks.pdf

Edited by WinterBear

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The sites below refer to 'two-needle' stitching used by the Roman Legion for stitching together the panels of goatskin tents. Remains of these tents have been found at the Roman military site of Vindolanda, close to Hadrian's Wall in northern England, and the stitching methods have been closely studied. This would seem to push the use of the saddle stitch back to at least 2000 years ago!

http://legioneromana.altervista.org/it/node/31?language=en

http://www.kingsmerecrafts.com/page44.html

http://www.larp.com/legioxx/leather.html

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Thanks for sharing, guys ... the links you have provided are very interesting!

Edited by Basically Bob

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