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Grumpy Coyote

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Posts posted by Grumpy Coyote


  1. I've been playing with brouging ideas like this (brogue is what that technique is called in shoe-making, I'm told). Marking the pattern is the tricky bit. I intend to print a pattern, then trace pretty much like you would do for tooling.

    Alternately, I may try this gizmo: https://www.tandyleatherfactory.com/en-usd/home/department/tools/punches/8054-00.aspx as you can set the basic pattern any way you like, and then fill gaps with a larger diameter punch.

    9-in-1-round-punch-8054-00.jpg


  2. Dye it, bake it low temp, and make certain the dye/stain is very, very dry before waxing. I've had luck with a heat gun on small pieces - even a hair dryer works. No baking. Also, like Dwight said, you can just dip it. The heat is for the wax, not the leather. As long as the wax is liquid, and the piece is warm it should have the same effect. I keep a tiny crock pot (payed 10 bucks I think), just for my bee's wax.

    Often I'll bake a flask for a few minutes after dipping, but just to get the wax to settle into the places I can't reach.


  3. Waxed leather will never come out light. Beeswax will always darken a piece several shades. If I need a light piece of waxed leather, I leave it natural and it comes up a medium-light brown at the lightest.

    It looks like you are going for Cuir Bouilli - which will always be darker than the original material. I'd say go for it. The hassle of bleaching isn't worth it, and a darker brown on black finished piece could be cool too.


  4. Not sure I would hang them directly... But you could easily make hanging shelves to store the rolls. Chain, wire racks (cheap kitchen racks would be perfect) and some eyehooks/bolts would give you a simple system to store rolls on. Make sure the wire racks are covered though, you don't want the metal to stain or imprint. I use a couple of old table cloths folded up.


  5. This is about strategy vs. tactics. Like others have said, it's not about what you are selling. It's about the *perceived* value of what you are selling to your target market, and what makes your product different than anyone else's.

    You start with a couple of strategic questions:

    1) Who am I selling to, specifically? (Hint: the answer isn't "everybody" or just "wallet buyers")

    2) What makes my product different than the other choices that audience has? (Hint: the answer isn't *just* "handmade" or "mass produced")

    Once you have those questions answered, the "mass-produce vs. handmade" question largely answers itself. Start-up costs aside, you pick the most efficient and affordable method to produce the product that still gives you the highest quality differentiated product. If handmade is part of what makes you different, then that's that.

    Figure out who you are building for, and why they would pick your products first.


  6. Technically, I suppose it's a PALS clip, as the webbing it's designed to go into is PALS (Pouch Attachment Ladder System) webbing... but most folk just use the term for the broader MOLLE carry system. We do love our acronyms over here.

    The PALS webbing is pretty common on bags and pouches here (I have a ton of it on my camping gear), so that clip comes in handy.

    I usually just make belt hangers for pouches and such out of 1 inch strips (which is the PALS standard) and a snap, but I couldn't resist trying this gizmo.

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