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Boriqua

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About Boriqua

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    Leatherworker
  • Birthday 07/03/1963

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  • Gender
    Male
  • Location
    Mesa, Arizona

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  1. Just received their eflyer with this machine and wondered if anyone had anything good or bad to say about it. I had been eyeballing a tipmann for the longest but the tandy has a deeper throat and might be worth looking at. Any thoughts? https://tandyleather.com/pages/cowboy-outlaw Alex
  2. Thank you so very very much Fellows. Forum never lets me down!! Alex
  3. It appears tandy has given up on stamps. Their website was bare. Does anyone know where I might find the border tool that made the meandering line on this holster. Had some Xmas money I want to spend on building up my stamp tools but cant find it anywhere including the etsy shops. Thank you in advance for any insight or leads. Alex
  4. My motorcycle saddle bag on my bike is built in a similar fashion but has wrap around straps. The interior is boring with only a phone pocket at the back. I did dye it though. So except for the black which is just fiebings Pro and the white the prettier bits were done with Tandy ecoflo. I wont use it for large areas but I have come to really like it for painterly stuff.It blends nicely. I start with a 50% dilution for the red using "scarlet red" for the roses then I bleed in my shadows in the bevels and indents by mixing some scarlet red straight with Forest green and then I use 100% scarlet red for the bridge. Its hard to pick up in the photos but edges of petals and where ever I thought appropriate I let the 50% dilution be the highlight by bring the full red up to it from the brownish color. For the leaves I start wtih ecoflo yellow at the highlights, a 50% dilution of the forest green which I use in washes like you might watercolor .. which is basically what this is and then come up from the deepest spots with 100% forest green. At the end I did a touch of Forest green and red in the very deepest recesses but I did it dry brush for just a touch of flavor. Yea .. I got carried away!! The little flower on the chin is washes of diluted violet with washed out yellow highlights. The whole thing is then sealed with a sprayer shooting 50% resolene and water and any exposed edges I treat with a paint brush and supersheen. Here are some color pics if you havent tried this stuff and want to copy. Its not great but .. they client liked it and it was really a bit of fun since I spend most days making holsters. Dont treat it like paint but like water color. Fades and washes until your happy and the best part is since you build it up .. its hard to mess up!! I know everyone says it!! but the pix really dont show off the color shifts well at all. The light and camera just kind of make it one color. Those roses are SOOoo more juicy.
  5. The white is referred to by the manufacturer as Acrylic painters ink. I have used a lot of acrylic in my life.. its just acrylic. What I do is I dilute it way down. My first few passes has almost no pigment but it begins to get into the leather and work like a primer. As I build up I will dilute it less but its always pretty dilute. I havent found a better way to get a good flat finish with acrylic. Each of those white areas has about 6 coats. I could have sprayed it but I would have had to do a lot of masking and I found when I spray the acrylic without doing several passes of really dilute acrylic its not as durable.
  6. Thanks brother! I have to make the time to come around more often. That is also the first piece I did totally with dyes and no stain. So all the shading and highlights were the result of careful painting. It was time consuming but the results were so much more satisfying. I remember how much you love stain .. NOT! It was a commissioned piece and I think AZ is more into Day of the Dead than Mexico.
  7. Haven't posted in forever but have been lurking about. This is a recent project and a good bit of fun. Its about 14" wide by 12 " high and a 3.75" gusset.
  8. So it turns out he loves it!!! Sent me this pic
  9. Angelus dyes are so juicy because they have a ton of pigment. I absolutely love their jet black but unless you cut it some you will be buffing until your eyes bleed. Even their cordovan requires a bit more work than Fiebings cordovan but I like the color better. I have no problem with Mahogany and brandy though so its color specific and not all angelus dyes are a pain. Here is my 2 cents and worth about that much Leave your piece alone after dying at very least overnight. I did not have the same success cutting Angelus dye with denatured that I did with fiebings so for me it was worth it to buy the Angelus reducer for the colors that need it like the jet black. Use a throw away rag as your first couple of passes. I keep all my old tee shirts and such and have a container of them in the shed. Soil one up toss it and then use another. My wonderful wife cuts them into smaller pieces for me. You can final step with the sheep's wool and tandy sells a fair sized bag of remnants for cheap. I still have some from the last bag I bought months ago. https://www.tandyleather.com/en/product/sheepwool-remnants-4-oz
  10. I love my round knife but when I reach for a knife to trim one piece to another I use my Fairly inexpensive Kiridashi. https://www.ebay.com/itm/Japanese-OKEYA-Kiridashi-Kogatana-Woodcraft-Knife-Hammered-Blade-Left-Handed/381797595256?hash=item58e4e8f878:m:mBzArzR6jzw-euOiaUWfjTA Mine is white steel and so long as you strop it before every use it stays mind blowing sharp. This is my go to for matching a back of something to a front. I usually oversize the back of my holster to the front, glue and then trim. I use the left handed version which when used in a draw fashion has the flat facing away from the work and the steep bevel against the work. So why do I use this over my very nice and sharp round knife. I have found my Round knife can, if not really really careful, ride up onto my face piece and potentially ruin a good deal of work. With the kiridashi I pull the knife around the top as my guide and there is little danger of it riding up. The left hand version with the steep bevel to the inside is perfect because you naturally tilt your hand to the right when cutting which actually makes the cut right up flush to the top piece. A little sanding and its done.
  11. Chased, Walked .. one and the same... I can see where the bevel tool looks like an individual stamp so the method you are using isnt being walked. I dont know .. maybe there is another term. It is one of the hardest things I ever learned in carving and ...... I still suck! There are many threads on how to use the bevel tool and I think its covered in one the the Stohlman books. I find the most satisfying method is to get a machine like rhythm So that when you are beveling it is tap move tap move tap move as you go along. I get my best work when what someone would hear if they were next to me is Tap, tap, tap tap in a somewhat rapid and even cadence. Think a slowed down sewing machine In the early days when I would hit the beveler then move it and then hit it again deliberately I would get the same kind of individual bevel marks I see in the piece you posted. If I had to guess I would say because they overlap isnt right and its hard to hit with a very consistent force when you hit it ..... move it .... set up the tool ... and hit it again .. so you get more varied bevel marks. Hope that made some sense but if not look up beveler here and there is lots of advice.
  12. Ah so thats it!!! Football. I couldn't figure out what the significance was but he expressed how important the orientation of the stars was.
  13. I wish I could share them. My father was gifted and would collect wood and such from the empty lots in the Bronx and make wonderful sculptures. He was also a fine painter. His drawing skills brought him here to be an illustrator but his best stuff was the stuff he did from his heart. He was born and lived most of his life in the mountains of Puerto Rico. I am a citified brat born and raised in NYC. I grew up in a world of order and grey. I think he was just in touch with something I am not going to get. My adult life has been about creating for others so I slavishly try and watch the details. Even in my painting and other artistic endeavors I am a little to rigid and so will never be a really good artist. 6 yrs of art school and 18 years in design and production of exhibits just means I am a art "Contractor" I may have to disagree with Bill's suggestion but with a caveat. I think the work is beautiful as it is. I think those two lines running perfectly parallel would ruin it for me. The errant cut is distracting because that is a skill thing and not an art thing but I wouldnt change those lines at all. So the caveat starts with a question. Are you trying to become an accomplished carver in the strictest sense? If so then Bill is dead on. If you are trying to create unique practical art .. I think your there and it would be lessened by the carving getting much tighter. Practice your skills so that strange cuts dont appear and even stitch lines are a peeve of mine but the carving and the quality of it I think is wonderful. I have produced all sorts of public display but if I could do this below I would be more thrilled than any of those pieces I made for the masses.
  14. I LOVE the tooling. My father was great with what I I will call primitive style patterns. Its a gift I don't seem to get the hang of. I am Jealous .. your piece looks fantastic.
  15. I like it when a customer gives you a thread but not so much an ending. I didnt know this but there is a Tennessee orange? I dont know if it associated with a school or the state seal but its a thing and I have one guy who is very into it being from Tenn. So he sent me this And it is some important Tennessee symbol at least to him and told me he had a new gun and could I do something with this. He is a repeat and I love my repeats .. says they were happy with my work!! and I do get a great source of pride when you come back so I said ... sure. So I made him this .. its simple but I think he will like it. Its orange lizard on a simple black. The orange is a lot juicier and nicely textured but my camera refused to give it to me.
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