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Bard Skye

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  • Content Count

    60
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About Bard Skye

  • Rank
    Member
  • Birthday 05/13/1955

Profile Information

  • Gender
    Male
  • Location
    Toledo, WA
  • Interests
    guitar, radio control, SCA (medieval re-enactments), leatherworking

LW Info

  • Leatherwork Specialty
    tooling, fabrication
  • Interested in learning about
    just about everything, really.
  • How did you find leatherworker.net?
    link from leatherpros.net
  1. Bob First off, Thank You! for the tutorial. I had no idea of how to deal with edges until I read it. My edges still need a lot of work, but at least now it looks like I have a clue or two. (Practice, practice, practice! Likewise for my stitching....) I have a couple of questions. I just finished a magazine holster for a friend. As you can see in the first pic, the base piece flares out to accomodate the belt loops. I burnished and polished the top portion of the box edges before stitching it to the base, then completed the edge work after. The finished edge took a bit of a beating during stiching, so I'm not real happy with it. I was wondering how you would have handled this. In the second pic, the arrows point to what looks like a dividing line between the box and base. It's not. The line is about half way through the thickness of the base. I've had this happen on several pieces now. It seems like as soon as I have one sanded out, another one appears. Any ideas why this might be happening? Thanks. Skye
  2. Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year, everyone!

  3. Tina That's beautiful, as always. The boarder detail is killer. Love It! Skye
  4. Like this, you mean? <g> Could have sworn I'd tried this, but maybe I'm just getting senile. Thanks. Skye
  5. At the risk of sounding like one of the technologically challenged, (which I'm not, normally) How the heck does the Multiquote option in the posts work? I've twisted it's tail just about every way I can think of, and can only quote one post. I know it's probably something obvious and stupid, but I'm missing it. Help, please? Skye
  6. A Dell, eh? Reminds me of when I lived in Forks, WA. (Yeah, the vampire town) there was a small computer repair shop that had a sign in the window: Dell - Thanks for the job security! Always got a laugh out of that. Skye
  7. BobH, on 12 December 2011 - 10:57 AM, said: What do they call the group that preceded baby boomers? Geezers? Whatever, they call us, I are one. I was born in '42 and turn 70 next year. To solve the fine print problems, I bought an Osborne magnifying headband and use good lighting. I also have one of the clamp on lamps with a magnifying lens but have no place where I can leave it set up so I rarely use it. For all you whippersnappers, just wait! Well guys, I'm a boomer, but my poor bod has been abused sufficiently that I *feel* 80 or so. Anyway, in honor of the so-called "Golden Years", here's a little something I found a few years ago... I can't see, I can't pee. I can't chew, I can't s***w. My memore shrinks, My hearing stinks. No sense of smell, I look like hell. My body is drooping, I have trouble pooping. The golden years have come at last, The golden years can kiss my ___! Skye
  8. Maybe it's the maker of the wool, but I've never found it necessary to burn it off. Just drop it in and give it a month to fully dissolve. Skye
  9. Yes, it leaves a raised stitch line, but I don't think that these would be grabbed hard enough to make them uncomfortable. Not like the handle on a 100# suitcase. <g> Using relatively thin lace, it will lie fairly flat, hide the seam, and definately add some "zing" to the look. Check out this scroll case that Tina made: http://leatherworker.net/forum/index.php?app=core&module=attach&section=attach&attach_rel_module=post&attach_id=47924 She does *incredible* work. I can only *hope* to be as good as her one day. She used something more complicated than the double loop, but the effect is the same. Just my $.02. Skye
  10. Nice work! Glad to see a fellow Okie on board. I was born and raised in Guthrie. Really need to get back home one of these days..... Skye
  11. ???? Pardon my ignorance, but what's a "rose engine"? Skye
  12. Yeah, somehow I didn't really think it was a 5 axis hotrod. But self designed and built? You're a better man than me... Skye
  13. Hopefully, I can be of help. What kind of needles are you using? I use the spring steel needles that I get from Tandy. You taper cut the end of the lace, put it through the eye, then open the halves of the needle and sandwich the lace between them. There's a small tooth that locks the lace in place. Works quite well. I gave up on trying to make my own lace. I always had problems with the tensile strength of my lace being vastly infereior to the commercial lace I can buy. I'm including an attachment that shows the Double Loop Stitch. It actually pretty easy, and looks really good. I aplogize in advance for the quality of the jpg. The word doc that I took it from was a bit blurry to start with, and printing it then re-scanning didn't help any. But it's still legible. It's shown being applied to an edge, but it works quite well on butt joints, too. If it turns out that your holes are too widely spaced for the stitch, you can simply do a double-pass through each hole the way it shows to do on corners. Just be sure not to let any twists make their way in. It'll look like..... well, gents aren't supposed to use that kind of language..... Hope this helps. Good luck. I think it'll look awsome. Besides, if the girlfriend's happy, that's the main thing, right? Skye
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