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Boriqua

So How Fast Are You With Your Hand Stitch?

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I love the Zen of the repetitive motion of hand stitching with an awl. Just something so soothing about punch stitch stitch if you get a good rhythm going. Im not looking to break any speed records but I am curious ... I can stitch a really pretty saddle stitch at about 6 inches in 12 minutes. About 30 stitches. Seems dreadfully slow. Seemed very mechanized when I was doing it but 12 minutes .....

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Cue the music, there's gonna be a showdown at the O.K. corral!

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I should add it was a holster so it was 2 pieces of 8-9 oz. There maybe I dont feel so bad now :dunno:

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Saw this thread and decided to time myself tonight. 20", 7 spi, 40 minutes. This was on 2/3 oz tooling veg tan, so I would be much slower on my knife sheaths, but luckily never have to sew 20" on a sheath.

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It takes me between 2.5 and 3 hours to hand sew sheep skin to one side of a saddle skirt. It all deepends on what I'm working on. Some things seem to go very quickly and others seem to just take forever.

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All I know is it takes me a lot longer to punch and stitch 5 layers of 8 than it does for my usual 3 layers. The end result works though.

11014956_1602865066635986_10734532432134

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I think for comparisons, everyone would have to comment on speed based on technique (punch through with chisel, awl, dremel?), leather thickness/layers, type of leather (oiled? chrome tanned? veg tanned?) size and type of thread, and complexity of stitch pattern (straight line? curves? using a nice pony or horse or holding it in your lap? Care what the stitch looks like in the end? etc.) I too would like to know how my stitching speed compares, but so many variables that it is almost impossible to compare. Unless everyone was willing to make a two layer belt 44" long out of 3 to 4 oz veg tanned leather, using a 7 stitch/inch pricking iron with an awl (stitch marking included in the time), 18/3 linen thread, and a stitching horse, then post beginning and end times with inches/hour calculated, and the end result photographed and posted, both front and backside of stitches displayed. And maybe some other variables I didn't consider in there... just sayin. My stitching has varied from 8"/hour to 24"/hour depending on all these variables.

YinTx


Just thought to myself: Maybe this would make a good "Keep making stuff Challenge" for June.... we could draw in a lot of comparisons then!

YinTx

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You're totally right about the number of variables involved. I've had knife sheaths take anywhere from an hour to stitch, to about 3 hours (like I think this one did). I use an overstitch wheel to mark my holes and then straight to the horse, all hand awled and stiched with saddle needles and 1 mm polyester thread.

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It takes me about a day or day and half to sew 25" of leather. Mainly because I cannot dedicate all of the time at one sitting for this hobby. But after all of these years, I still like to hand sew.......I have yet to purchase a machine and doubt if I will. Plus it helps me relax and not want to kill my teenage children!!

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Plus it helps me relax and not want to kill my teenage

DITTO ! You can make it last really long if necessary !

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Took me about 6 to 8 hours to hand stitch this belt.

chip5_zpsaa059cb9.jpg

It's 2 layers of 9-10 ounce.

My wife hand stitched this ranger belt in about half that time.

image_zpskmwwguib.jpg

It's 7-8 ounce with a 4-5 ounce liner.

Guess who does the belt stitching now.

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Took me about 6 to 8 hours to hand stitch this belt.

It's 2 layers of 9-10 ounce.

My wife hand stitched this ranger belt in about half that time.

It's 7-8 ounce with a 4-5 ounce liner.

Guess who does the belt stitching now.

That is toooo funny. I keep trying to get my wife to take a hand at stitching but whenever I bring it up she looks at me like I dont speak the same language. She is no wimp now .. she works outdoors everyday at a Botanical Garden but I think she is wise to me wanting her to help on the stitching and she is playing dumb. That or she is from the Bronx and I am from Brooklyn and there really is a dialect language barrier going on ... still after 16 yrs! :thumbsup:

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That is toooo funny. I keep trying to get my wife to take a hand at stitching but whenever I bring it up she looks at me like I dont speak the same language. She is no wimp now .. she works outdoors everyday at a Botanical Garden but I think she is wise to me wanting her to help on the stitching and she is playing dumb. That or she is from the Bronx and I am from Brooklyn and there really is a dialect language barrier going on ... still after 16 yrs! :thumbsup:

My wife and I both used to work in factories together. I know that all I gotta do is show her something once and off she goes. I was getting kinda backed up on orders and she wanted to help. I showed her and off she went.

It was really something to watch her hands go. Kinda like watching a leather stitching video of me but at double speed.

Next time I think I'll get it on video and post it on my YouTube channel.

My wife's Italian and I'm an American Indian. A loud emotional Italian and a quiet stoic Injun, we're quite the pair.

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Takes me about 4-5 hours to hand stich a padfolio or guitar strap including punching the holes, and my fingers hurt like hell afterwards. Once I started making more than a couple, I found a machine.

Edited by Colt W Knight

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My wife and I both used to work in factories together. I know that all I gotta do is show her something once and off she goes. I was getting kinda backed up on orders and she wanted to help. I showed her and off she went.

It was really something to watch her hands go. Kinda like watching a leather stitching video of me but at double speed.

Next time I think I'll get it on video and post it on my YouTube channel.

My wife's Italian and I'm an American Indian. A loud emotional Italian and a quiet stoic Injun, we're quite the pair.

Ha, funny! It's awesome that you guys work together.

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I have a homemade stitching pony. I practiced for hours on scrap leather. I am still striving to improve and I don't get in a hurry. Not getting in a hurry is important to me. I figure a little speed will come with time.

I've had some jaws drop when I tell them it's hand stitched. That's more important than speed and shoddy work.

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Fordpkup,

I could not have said it better. My stitching satisfaction does not come from the speed, but from the quality of the product. If I want speed, I'll use a sewing machine, it'll at least maintain some degree of consistency that I would not be able to if I was working full tilt.

That being said, it is nice to know whether I am working at a snails pace and should continue to try to pick up the rate, or if I'm moving along at a decent speed.

Of course, I'd have to be stitching something for any of this to hold true, something I have not been able to do for some time now. Something about lack of time....

YinTx

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