All Activity
- Past hour
-
"Sheriff of Cochise" rig
chuck123wapati replied to fredk's topic in Gun Holsters, Rifle Slings and Knife Sheathes
Looks like all his leather came from the same guy. -
"Sheriff of Cochise" rig
chuck123wapati replied to fredk's topic in Gun Holsters, Rifle Slings and Knife Sheathes
Check out his shoulder rig lol, the shirt is cut to hide the strap. -
"Sheriff of Cochise" rig
chuck123wapati replied to fredk's topic in Gun Holsters, Rifle Slings and Knife Sheathes
-
"Sheriff of Cochise" rig
chuck123wapati replied to fredk's topic in Gun Holsters, Rifle Slings and Knife Sheathes
Looks like a pretty standard tv rig in design for that era of tv lol, i cant really see the tooling pattern, but it's a Mexican loop pattern holster, Tandy has a pattern pack for Buscaderos. What caught my eye is the 30 30 on the door lol Now that's just bad ass. Funny how back in the day folks actually cared about their looks. My folks were from that era; they didn't go out if they weren't dressed to go out, and yeah decorated boots were the thing back then. My dad had a silver-tipped Bolo tie and matching silver collar tips that went on his shirt collars. We still have them. - Today
-
Might make them like a guitar strap ? I made this and it is somewhat adjustable , more slots spaced closer would offer more adjustment . Just a thought .......
-
I feel that. Luckily I made these shoes for myself so at least I dont have to tell a customer! Ok I will keep that in mind. I applied some shoe glue to the under with a scalpel. I will see if it holds or not. If not I will give that a run.
-
Sand some tan coloured leather, take the dust and mix it with some weather-proof PVA glue to get a thick paste. Apply to the wound and let dry. After apply some polish and buff lightly, do this several times and the wound should be less noticeable
-
Thinking about it I could probably make one out of pallet wood, some of that wood is pretty good stuff (and cheap) once it's cleaned up. The latching mechanism looks pretty easy to make, just a bit of welding required. The hardest part would be drawing out the pieces so it will actually work, then it's just lots of time!! I hope you're making scaled drawings of yours as you go, ClaimedVacancy (hint,hint).. It's looking good so far.
- 18 replies
-
- swiss leather tools
- swiss army leather
-
(and 2 more)
Tagged with:
-
Paddle holster question
DoubleKCustomLeathercraft replied to DoubleKCustomLeathercraft's topic in Leatherwork Conversation
Holstersmith is a go too for blue guns. I did look at the paddles there, but I'm thinking if using 24ga galv steel in between leather. The client is looking for a leather paddle, and using the plastic paddles would make it way too thick. There are a couple posts I found in the archives here that explain how to do so, and it sounded like a good place to start. They're old posts. Appreciate the response. I'm still interested if there are any other ideas out there, but the metal reinforcement for the holster and paddle make sense -
here is a 112w manual but the machine in the manual has a different stitch length mechanism everything else should be the same. Have you threaded both needle from the correct? 112W139-inst.pdf
- 10 replies
-
- singer 112w
- double needle
-
(and 1 more)
Tagged with:
-
As someone who makes mistakes line this more than I'd admit. All I can say is bummer...I wouldn't know how to approach this without making it look like a scar from Frankenstein's monster.
-
-
Paddle holster question
wizard of tragacanth replied to DoubleKCustomLeathercraft's topic in Leatherwork Conversation
Never done it but I would start here... https://www.holstersmith.com/vcom/advanced_search_result.php?keywords=paddle Does this one give you any ideas? https://www.holstersmith.com/vcom/paddle-mount-blade-tech-attachment-hardware-p-2089.html If I were attempting this, I would use Weldwood contact cement to put a layer of thin leather over the surface that would contact one's skin... maybe. -
Your advice is always great, very well thought out. I'm going to take those steps before jumping shifting my attention to the right side. None of the other advice or tutorials I've tried make those suggestions. I've only been swing since the pandemic. I started making mask with an industrial single needle Juki and learned a lot on my own. I learned to make jeans on that machine and now I'm trying to expand my studio with a double needle. After this is my Juki serger and union special double needle. I don't just want to know how to sew with vintage industrial machines but also how to service them on my own. Patience with trial and error are the best teachers.
- 10 replies
-
- singer 112w
- double needle
-
(and 1 more)
Tagged with:
-
In the old TV series "Sheriff of Cochise" John Bromfield wears a nice, very elaborately tooled buscadero type rig Seen clearest at the beginning, from 0.18 to 0.21 seconds. Clarity of the YT video is not great Anyone know anymore about it? Is there a pattern? Lots of questions An enquiring nosy-buddy wants to know PS; He seems to wear nicely tooled boots as well
-
Not really, if you went with the concho one and had multile holes on the inside part for popular sizes, would be a smidge of a gamble. Also same if using a buckle.
-
So basically a friction fit? I had hoped to make one and put it on the table to sell, but apparently it needs to be custom fit to some degree. Also, thanks for all the details!
-
Hobbyist warehouse contents for sale
Northmount replied to joea's topic in Businesses & Estate Sales
Resize your photos. 800 pixels in the longest dimension is quite adequate. Smart phones can't display high resolutions even though the camera can capture the high resolution scene. If your files are too large to post here due to file size restrictions, you need to resize your files to fit. Follow this link for some helps and suggestions. https://leatherworker.net/forum/topic/15122-how-to-post-pictures-on-lw/?do=findComment&comment=551171 There are lots of Apps, software, and online tools available on the web, or even built into your device to enable you to reduce your file sizes. 800 pixels in the longest dimension is quite adequate. Smart phone screens and many monitors don't display high res files in high resolution. People that live on the fringes of the internet appreciate smaller file sizes and high res photos may take from 10 minutes to hours to download. - Yesterday
-
I would call Toledo Industrial Sewing Machines. They had some small, obscure parts I needed a while back. None of it is listed on their website.
-
Swiss Saddler Clam Drawings
ClaimedVacancy replied to ClaimedVacancy's topic in Leatherwork Conversation
My thoughts too. It’s a lot of money for such a device, and ya know, for those that need it and don’t want to make it, fine. I mean I’ve made all of this with only a handful of pictures, and doing the best to match contours and ratios that I can find. And it’s taken a good while to get here! I think I’m only in this project about $150 dollars at this rate. The most expensive part is the wood, and Baltic birch is not cheap anymore. If i had used poplar for everything I probably could’ve saved a few. Hardware is the next most expensive thing. But if you want to be real conscious of money, go to estate sales over a month every week and collect hardware and wood. I have so much antique hardware from those sales, and the sells would’ve thrown it all out had I not grabbed it!- 18 replies
-
- swiss leather tools
- swiss army leather
-
(and 2 more)
Tagged with:
-
For that much money, it better do the sewing for me...
- 18 replies
-
- swiss leather tools
- swiss army leather
-
(and 2 more)
Tagged with:
-
Dyeing leather
dikman replied to Samalan's topic in Dyes, Antiques, Stains, Glues, Waxes, Finishes and Conditioners.
Maybe you're just accident-prone?
