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Everything posted by DJole
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Well, here in Tacoma we do have the Game Matrix--I never really considered making a set of these for sale. I can see that perhaps I should look into this. I'd have to use a few standard designs (rather than Tom's custom Chinese dragon and runic door inscription on this one.) I either need to perfect my barrel stitch, or else use an alternate method of connecting the sides, before I would sell them.
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Mojo--go for it! We need these to become the Gucci leather accessory of RPG players. There is one modification which Tom made after receiving this: he said that it was too soft, since he had a TON of dice in it. What he did is get a piece of PVC pipe which fit inside as a liner. If I were to build more of these, I'd build them around the PVC pipe (and maybe glue some nice pigskin lining on the inside surface of the PVC.
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No more d4 Caltrops! Nice job! ;-) I have a friend who is an avid gamer; I made him this dice holder: http://home.comcast.net/~lukeythetruck/djole/Publications/Leather/TomDragon.htm
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Past Due On Some Showing Off Vol 1. ; ) Helm
DJole replied to Prince's topic in Historical Reenactment
Do the horns make it hard to wear, due to their weight pulling it forward or backward on the neck? -
Satchel No.4 - side view
DJole commented on lightningad's gallery image in Our Leatherwork Galleries
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Armor Project, Sewing, And A Big Buy; Could Use Suggestions!
DJole replied to evaengineer's topic in Historical Reenactment
EvoStik Time Bond Contact Adhesive (haven't used it; not really sure when, how, or where one would use it) My understanding of adhesives is that they are often used to fasten 2 leather pieces together prior to stitching/riveting. Adhesives are also used to glue a lining to a backing piece, and for glueing rolled edges down. 8 different dyes Who made the dyes, and are they spirit, oil or water-based dyes? If they're water based dyes, you will want to think twice before using them on armor which will be exposed to moisture (rain, sweat, etc.) -
Armor Project, Sewing, And A Big Buy; Could Use Suggestions!
DJole replied to evaengineer's topic in Historical Reenactment
What type of leather do I want for making pauldrons, sabatons, and a breastplate? It depends--are you tooling it? If so, you'll need to use tooling leather. If you're not tooling the pieces, you can use tooling leather anyway (since you can dye it) or you can use other pre-dyed leather of the right weight. What amount of leather would I want for making pauldrons, sabatons, and a breastplate? That's hard to say, without having the patterns on hand. You'll want a complete set of patterns to lay out next to each other, to figure out square footage. Where should I purchase my leather? I can't make any clear recommendations for this, whether it is better to handle the leather first or trust to the seller/shipper to send you what you wanted. There are a variety of leather suppliers online, and I suspect that other forum members will be able to make recommendations to you. What other leather related items should I purchase? I don't see any kind of dedicated skiving tool in your list, nor a strap maker. You can get by without a strap maker (steady hand, sharp knife, and metal straight edge work fine), but they are nice to have. A skiver, on the other hand, is something you may find useful. -
Armor Project, Sewing, And A Big Buy; Could Use Suggestions!
DJole replied to evaengineer's topic in Historical Reenactment
For expert training on hand stitching, search YouTube for "Nigel Armitage leather" videos (he's a poster on this forum). He shows the way it's meant to be done. -
You must not be over on the Rainy side--I'm in Tacoma.
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How about this? http://tombanwell.blogspot.com/2011/11/naming-contest-for-plague-doctor-mask.html
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Leather Carving Workshops, Lessons Wanted In Nw Uk
DJole replied to blackstar's topic in Help Wanted
Off topic--I see you are in Northern Wales...I spent a summer in Wales learning Welsh down in Lampeter, and I took a weekend to visit the Snowdon area (Caernarvon, Snowdon itself, Bangor, and Llanfair P. G.) Where are you located in Wales? -
Cajun, thanks for your interest. You should know first that it's not a charity--none of the nativity pieces are actually sold; they are merely displayed. So perhaps you may want to reconsider your offer, since the only person who would benefit from it would be me.
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Here is my modified graphic: You can see that I made some modifications on Joseph and Jesus, and I added the star. Here is the work in progress, with some coloring on: colors used: Angelus Light Blue Angelus Purple Fiebing USMC black Cova Acrylic Gold Acrylic White Tandy Mahogany (probably not Fiebing--I've had this bottle since the 1980s). Fiebing White (!)--yes, that's Fiebing's infamous white dye, making a rare appearance. I had to shake it up well, and apply 4 or 5 coats, but that makes a nice grey donkey. I'm going to leave the faces leather colored--that's a nice brown tan skin that should do just fine. I'm also thinking of doing a black antique stain in the interior of the stable. I'll do all the other colors first, then coat the colors with a resist (Tan Koat perhaps) before I apply the black antique dye to get a nice charcoal grey. I will do the pupils of the eyes with a fine-tip Sharpie permanent pen
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Cajun: Here is the online source for the woodcut. You can see that I modified it in spots. <http://www.godecooke...al/bibl015.jpg>
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Very nice on the face! I'm a little leery of tackling realistic portraits, myself, so I salute your bravery! There is one thing that you might want to take a look at--the beveling between the arm and chest. It seems too abrupt to me; I think it would be better to widen out that line, to add shape to the chest.
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Here's my new project in progress--a Nativity panel. (Every year at Christmas time, my local church organizes a Festival of the Nativity in which hundreds of Nativities fill the church and the community is invited to take part and view/contribute. I've been meaning to contribute something like this for a couple of years now, and finally I got past the thinking stage!) I've based this on a medieval woodcut, which seems to translate surprisingly well into leather. The roughness and sharpness of the lines works well. I've never done anything like these cloth folds, so I had to figure out how to do them with my bevelers and my modeling spoon. I also have done some embossing on the rear side of the leather to raise certain parts. I'm not quite done with the modeling stage--there are some places where I need to clean up some edges, even out the background, and such. Then it's on to the dyeing. I dragged out my dyes today to consider colors. Mary's dress will be blue, but the Fiebing Light Blue is *much* too dark. I did a bit of mixing (Fiebing Lt. Blue and Fiebing White) to get a lighter blue, but that's going to be a LOT of blue and a LOT of mixing. I'm considering Angelus' light blue. Should I go ahead and buy some of that for my test pallete? Joseph's robe is still undecided yet--gray? brown? green? Apparently there is no set iconographic color for his robe, so I'm on my own here! I'm wondering about skin tones--these folks clearly need to be olive skinned, with dark hair. Is there a good color already made, or do I have to custom mix my own? This will be framed, eventually--what do I need to watch out for to protect/preserve the leather and frame from each other?
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My father passed away at 1:30 this morning. He suffered a heart attack (not his first) 3 weeks ago, but he was unable to recover from it. My father retired from the US Forest Service about 15 years ago, and in his retirement he built and rebuilt boots for Drew's Western Wear in Klamath Falls, Oregon. The last thing he and I talked about, before his heart attack (which happened at his work down in the boot shop) was boots. We talked about boots quite a bit--I realize, now, that it was because here was something he could really share with his college-educated son. He knew I worked with leather, and he worked with leather, so he wanted to share that with me. My father and I weren't distant, but I think that this was a visceral connection that he enjoyed. There was a pair of 10" Hathorn packers that came into his possession--they were brand new, but the UPS deliverer had placed them on the porch of the person who purchased them, and dogs had smelled the rawhide and chewed into it. UPS paid for a new pair of boots, and the client sent these on to Drews, where they reached the hands of my father, who realized that they were my size, and rebuilt them for me, even sewing on a welt where in the original construction there was none. So, in his memory, I wrote this poem, which you folks as leather workers might appreciate. You may rest assured that I will wear those boots and remember him with love. --- Boots: 10 inch packers The last thing we talked about Father to son, before he died Was boots. If a man works with his hands And his feet Balanced on fir roots, sweating on the fire line, Raising sons out of the forests he needs tough skin good boots to protect the tenderness of the sole of the foot of the soul. The vamp–a dull color of blood and dust together, the blood of his veins the dust of the wild places he loved Buffed and waterproofed to keep my feet warm and dry, I am wrapped tightly by the work of his hands embraced by his arms. The 10 inch upper–black as Cascade duff in the snow-melt, high to support the ankle and keep me upright as I walked, Upright as he walked and I followed, 10 inches high he walked firm and strong, and I followed him through the trees. The laces–black leather, earth tones and primitive –he knew that woven laces wear out too quickly in the wilderness when you need them the most so he wove thick, square laces as long as my life of my boots. The heel counter–rawhide, to protect against spurs I will never wear, rawhide white and strong as tough sagebrush country sprinkled carelessly over basalt rimrock the color of semi-arid soils. The color of his face, worn as the seasons changed around him faster than he could walk. I was his spring, and his summer, and I knew he would be my winter, death under snow, waiting silently for rebirth. The soul is eternal– the sole is mini-Vibram, not caulks for traction on the logs not cowboy for ease in the stirrup not deep cleats for muddy trails; chosen by him not for the dirt the soils the rock where he worked but for my easier, paved trails. He could re-sole them for me, he said. And he has re-souled I am his soul living in me. These boots, his loving hands reach out practical, strong and rugged built to take me into wild places and even the wild places he never knew the untracked wildernesses of college corridors library carpets worlds beyond his hillsides. These are not new boots– New, they would have been too dear. Discarded, they became dear to him. He re-crafted them, re-built them turning waste into care building leather into love, using tools and hands and materials a love for craftsmanship and raw, animal material life and death crafted into usefulness One thing, at least, that we shared Deftly stitching a welt where none existed before Because in his art, his craft, he knew quality boots can be re-built. He knew– His own boots had passed through the years, forward through my childhood, tattered and worn, patched and replaced–all but the uppers were new, but they were the same boots. The supple texture of boot leather, the smell of hides, thread and glue stitched us together in his heart. My soles can be rebuilt My soul stitched together with his, father and son His soul goes onward, tattered and patched to be rebuilt, vamp, upper, sole and counter Into beauty and usefulness by the Maker.
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Thanks unto thy history wonkiness, Tasha--that's the kind of I'm looking for: documentation and a workable pattern both.
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I picked up some nice green upholstery leather from the Odd-Lots bin at Tandy this week. I think I might like to make a leather jerkin out it (mid to late medieval period). Is there a pattern somewhere, or do I have to re-invent the wheel?
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Mobile phone cases
DJole replied to UKRay's topic in Purses, Wallets, Belts and Miscellaneous Pocket Items
I used a different approach on my cell phone case. My cell phone is a "soap bar" type, that doesn't flip open. The holder is an oval cylinder, with the top cover held on by a snap. The cover also has an interior loop through which I have fastened the hand strap of my phone, so they are connected. That means I don't lose the top, because it's attached to the phone, and the phone is also harder to misplace! The basket weave was done with a knife and a beveler--no stamping. You can see the gold snap clip, which is clipped onto a belt loop riveted to the case. Maybe you'll see something in this that you'll find useful. -
Tooled leather scroll case - Celtic Heart and Rings
DJole replied to RuehlLeatherWorks's topic in Historical Reenactment
I want to see the "back" of the cylinder, where you stitched it together. Do you have pix of that? -
Pirate hipflask garter
DJole replied to Pauly's topic in Purses, Wallets, Belts and Miscellaneous Pocket Items
The dye job is attractive--the two tones are striking. I like your ship, too--it matches the style of pirate-era art, and reminds me of scrimshaw work. I suspect that the owner will have a hard time keeping this garter hidden... -
Wow, that's ambitious for a first piece! I can see you are getting used to the tools and what they do, and how to replicate anatomy. I'm not a figure carver--never done it, and likely never will--but good on you for giving it a try!
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That's the same way I got my granite slab--I saw the custom stonework store on a nearby street and walked away with a scrap piece of granite countertop. It's ragged on one edge, and I suppose I should smooth it down one of these days, but it didn't cost me a cent.
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Oh, very nice! The bag is a good solid piece; the line decorations (scratched?) are perfect for period decorations; the piping is a lovely flourish that makes this piece sing. And hand stitched, too. Bravo! I'd love to see the back. Got any photos?