Jump to content

fredk

Contributing Member
  • Posts

    5,731
  • Joined

Everything posted by fredk

  1. No experience of that one. I use these - link below. I buy them by the 5 so I always have a sharp one to hand. Although they say 'edge beveler' they make an excellent V groove, as can been seen in their photo https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/5Pcs-Working-Hand-Leather-Edge-Skiving-DIY-Craft-Keen-Edge-Beveler-Silver-Tools/352887641342?ssPageName=STRK%3AMEBIDX%3AIT&var=622143640519&_trksid=p2057872.m2749.l2649
  2. As I read the OP; the postal service lost the item after the client had posted it to their relative, not when HS posted. I reckon HS should supply his client with a full price costing of the item for the client to use in her claim. Unless he has already. In my experience of Royal Mail losing items the basic amount claimable is up to £20 and its hard to get even that out of them. One can, for a small extra fee cover the higher value of an item. Yeah, its a real bummer (aka, it sucks) when the postal service looses an item. Its like loosing a pet. Maybe it will turn up, eventually.
  3. A sort-of update to this. I recently received some orders from China. One from the mainland and one from Hong Kong. Both suppliers sent me messages about the orders. Both were basically apologies for the delay in fulfilling the orders, due to this virus affecting their workers. But there was more. The HK dealer explained the delay was caused by his/her workers having to go into quarantine and his/her workplace had to be deep cleaned. Both dealers indicated that there was a delay by China Post allowing items out of the country. China Post was holding overseas items for several days before releasing them. This I read as the packages being 'quarantined' for some days. On one of my items it made a delay of 5 / 6 days over ETA, the other was 3 days over ETA but I noticed it had come by air service not the usual slow-boat
  4. I make two versions of a same style book cover. The cheap one uses upholstery grade leather, is glued and riveted together. The leather is soft and about 1.2mm (3oz?). The better ones uses veg tan leather and is glued and sewn together. The leather is about 2.5mm (6 oz?) on the outside and about 1.2mm (3 oz?) on the insides. The covers I make are for A6 sized note books or diaries. A6 is half of A5, the size you are looking at. For a tight fit the outside of my cover is 25cm x 17cm, for a looser fit it is 26cm x 18cm. Inside pockets hold the book covers, they are 7 or 9cm x 17cm or 18cm For A5 you'd need to up the measurements, to about 34cm x 23 or 24cm for the outside cover and the inside pocket flap to between 9 and 12cm x 23 or 24cm This is the insides of the cheap version Without a book and with a book hth
  5. Get along to a thrift or charity store or the local (proper) dump and look for old 'leather' covered furniture which is being disposed of and cut that 'leather' off the frames. In some cases you may be given a chair or sofa free and be expected to take the remains to the proper dump/disposal site.
  6. No, not really. They had already been known as the bread bakery, they promoted themselves as the bread bakery, 'we are the best bread makers as thats all we make. No cakes, no buns, no French Fancies, just the best bread in Ulster' sort of thing. Thats why a lot of us went wtf when we heard of the court case. This has been a deviation off the main subject so to get back on it: I mentioned 'shop front' to a few friends who had shops but shut them up. Actually being taken to court or threatened with it was a major factor in their shut down of their main shop, to continue their profession as a 'hobbyist' or part-timer from home, not directly affected by those laws.
  7. The clamps on the French both bow outwards before turning in to make the jaws. like this ( ) On the English one clamp is a straight extension of the leg then turns for the jaw. The other clamp bows out then turns in for the jaw. like this I )
  8. For what I know, use black. Original pouches, holsters etc I've seen for the CS are black leather
  9. Very many congratulations from me as well. If yours is 2nd place then the winner must be a real stunner and the competition must have been fierce To everyone on here you'll always be the winner, Ryan
  10. To cover some of the above. A true story event from a few years back. A customer goes into a Home Bakery and asks for an iced fruit cake to be made. The bakery refuses. Customer goes to a government body called Equal Rights Commission who takes up his case and takes said bakery to court. Bakery looses case. Bakery takes appeals through several courts until they win. Cost to small bakery, in excess of £70,000, cost to 'customer' is a big fat 0. Home Bakery, has a shop front and bakes all their goods on the premises. They also supply other bakery shops. They make only bread, just bread, loaves, fruit loaves, plain loaves, bread baps (burger buns to you lot), they do not make buns or cakes. That is why they refused to make the 'customer' a cake. They told the 'customer' this, they told the ERC, they told the court this but still they lost on 'discrimination' . The matter was pushed not on what the bakery makes or did not make, but on their refusal to supply someone based on the 'customer' being of one of the groups I mentioned, even though the refusal was not. There was a second cake case recently which cost a bakery £185,000 in costs and the 'customer' 0. Although its been revealed that the ERC lost about £280,000 in costs - so far, as they re taking the case to the European Courts. But this stage won't involve the bakery. In this case the bakery is a well known and liked family bakery and friends raised donations to pay their costs. The amount raised was £195,000. Without this the bakery owners would not only have had to close their two shops, making about 20 workers unemployed but they would have had to sell their home. This cake case is far more complicated but involves the same principles.
  11. I did not make an exception as I don't know how to. I cleared my cache and cookies and I got straight in without that blocking message that I got at first a few days ago. edited to add. My laptop has been shut down and restarted several times over the last lot of days, and the browser shut down even more times, and every time I restart and relaunch the browser I get straight in to this forum
  12. I have straight-in access. No problems. The site is marked as 'Not Secure' in the address bar though Might I suggest that you all clear your cache then try access again
  13. I know nowt about programming but I do remember when the local community newspaper I worked for got its first computer. It had a 6 inch screen. Everything we typed in was white on a black screen. Then we had to type in a load of commands to make it print out. One mistake and you had to type all those commands in again. Stupid thing was the bosses said everything had to be typed in and printed out, proof read, then sent to the printers who typed it into their printing computer. Up to then we just wrote it all on paper and sent it over. A lot of kerfuffle wasting time so it was.
  14. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, Yes I prefer a double cheese
  15. yeah but, no but, yeah but, no but, . . . . . . . if your computer mouse was a real mouse every time you scroll you'd be stroking its butt!
  16. If the ram extends above the head you could try putting the magnets on the top end of it. You'll need more magnets for the magnetism to be effective. I did that on something (a mini-drill stand) as a temporary measure and it worked out ok.
  17. me too. my browser was telling me that the site was under attack from hacking. I PM'd Joanna about it but I've not heard back yet
  18. yes, versions are commonly available. some with two cutting blades. its a hole or disc cutter, for metal or wood. eg; https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/ADJUSTABLE-CIRCLE-HOLE-CUTTING-DRILL-SAW-CHROME-/183252805928?hash=item2aaab7e928
  19. When I require 'sheep skin fleece' I use the artificial species. I get it by the 1/4, 1/2 or full 1 yard from a fabric outlet. Costs about £4 for a 1/2 yard which yields lots and lots of pads
  20. Questions: I presume the leather is quite thin, approx what thickness? and how did you prevent it from going out of shape whilst tooling it?
  21. The situation is echoed here. There is Ireland, Ireland, Northern Ireland, Ulster, Eire, Hibernia, Erin, United Kingdom and Great Britain I'll not hijack this thread with details, unless I'm asked to
  22. Simplest way; get a ruler in your preferred measure, eg mm or inch. Start on the '0' line and wrap thread around the ruler, each turn tight up against the last. Keep going for a few inches or centimetres. Count how many threads there are an divide into the measure eg, if you have 80 turns over 2cm /20mm = each thread is 0.25mm
  23. The Tandy press will do them with a set of dies; https://www.tandyleather.eu/en/product/press-dies-for-hand-press
  24. The top part of the unit is separate. It can be bought in 2, 3, 4 5 & 6 drawer sizes. The 6 is 4 uneven shallow drawers and two large ones, each half the width of the whol and each about 2.5 inches deep. With a top handle they can be carried around, but once loaded with tools they start to get heavy. Have you looked at kitchen trollies? I have 4 on which I store on-going projects and the necessaries. https://www.argos.co.uk/product/8400444
×
×
  • Create New...