Hi, I've been trying to learn leatherworking for a few months now. My goal is to make theatrical looking goth/metal type accessories so I've mostly been working with latigo with dyed veg-tan only as accents but I've mostly been doing belts and collars and cuffs. I want to start making garments out of the thinner weights of veg-tan, which means wet forming them for a better fit/shape. I prototyped out a neck corset, first in posterboard and then in a thin marine vinyl and now I have this beast: Apologies for the poor photography, apparently that is something else I need to improve at
The hardware isn't set yet, just placed in to hold things together temporarily. I was planning on soaking it in hot water and then wearing it until it dried. But, then how am I going to dye it and finish it? I usually just use daubers and eco-flo and finish it off with super shene but I don't think daubers are going to reach all the crevices. I know that if I dye it first it'll impede the wet forming process... and possibly also dye my neck black. I've also noticed that when I dye strips of veg-tan with the eco-flo and leave them to dry the edges sort twist off the ground. It only takes a gentle tug at the edges to get them straight, but does that mean it's getting wet enough during the dying process that it would just undo any wet forming?
Also, should I oil it? at what stage? And could there be bad effects with the hardware and water interacting?
Sorry for so many questions at once, but out of all the things I've been researching on leatherworking wet-forming has been the most confusing. Some people seem to get good results just from using their hands and intuition and other people make very exacting forms so I'm unsure what approach to take. Until recently I was a 3d artist in the videogame industry so I know enough anatomy to sculpt forms if necessary, but I don't know out of what... and unfortunately I never liked actual physical sculpting that much although I suppose I could learn to.
Thank you for looking! Here is some of my more conventional work.
-Liz