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fredk

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Everything posted by fredk

  1. I'm thinking - as an acid is used, an alkali would be used to neutralise it. In the 18th C it would have been lye, made from roasted oyster shells or limestone. A little lye destroys, a lot will preserve. Near where I used to live there had been a murder in the 1920s or so. A farm worker murdered and robbed a neighbouring farmer. The worker buried the farmer under his stock of lye meant for use on the fields. Round this way Lye was also used sprinkled on dead bodies to speed their decomposition. But in this case the amount of lye mummified the dead farmer's body and preserved it, for the police to find it.
  2. Please stop with the personal attacks. Now you have started your own rant thread please leave this one alone so others can discuss the OP's bag in a tactful and helpful way
  3. Abbey sells them new for under £25 https://www.abbeyengland.com/solingen-french-knife-4529-7754.html I have an old one which I use sometimes I got mine in one of those knick-nack shops which used to be everywhere in the UK - the ones that sold second-hand household items, old tools, the odd bit of furniture. I got it for £1. The seller thought it was a glazier's knife and I've seen it sold as such too.
  4. I get my brass stamps made by a chap (or chapess) in China. He's on holiday right now. I draw up the artwork and send the image to him as a jpeg and he cuts it in brass. Being brass it can be used plain or heated in a soldering iron or whatever. This is my present maker; https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Custom-Made-Design-Logo-Leather-Stamp-Carving-Tools-Branding-Iron-Mold-Plate/142322898759?var=441360988493 I've also used this maker; https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Custom-Made-Design-Your-Logo-Leather-Seal-Wood-Stamp-Branding-Iron-Carving-Mold/382286790022?var=651096957971
  5. I agree that magnetic closures will not be sufficient, even some tuck-tite types aren't strong enough I would attach the ends of a handle to the top of gusset, towards the rear so it doesn't obstruct the opening too much.
  6. I contribute but nowt changed for me
  7. you design one and get it made
  8. the client has cos you have put the price on each item
  9. nice suggestion: glue some magnets on the jaws, at the lower level of the outside leather. most useful for attaching a needle to whilst sewing. I have several magnets on mine
  10. I'll chip in. When I had to get a stamp made for a club it cost me £26. This, with anything I have to get especially to do a job I price into the cost of the main job, by pro-rata. In this case the club wanted 10 items - my choice of what to make. So I made them coffee cup cuffs. Pro-rata the stamp was £2.60 to be added to each cuff, but I didn't add that as I knew there would be a repeat order. I added £1.50 = £15 covered.(cos I like the club) Year two, the club wanted 16 items made, so I made them luggage tags and key fob purses. I added £0.70 to each item. = £11.20 + the previous £15 = £26.20 = stamp paid for Year three the club wanted 14 items. I made them small valet trays. No need to add any extra. Year four - this year, I reckon they'll be wanting about 12 items. If you charge $100 for the stamp right off the client may be ok with it, but if you hide its cost in the price per item its easier for them to swallow. eg $100/50 items = $2 per item. Can you add that to the price of the item? I like to have the stamp made and keep control of it. Means that client has to come back to me (muhaaa!), they can't take the stamp away and get stuff made by a competitor.
  11. Hoods were made of leather as well as other materials. Although leather hoods were mostly worn by soldiers Look for 'Simplicity' patterns. They did a whole range of clothing patterns, mostly in association with the SCA, who sort-of supplied the general information for accuracy. Patterns range from Viking to Medieval, leggings/trews, surcotes, bodices, hoods & hats, you name it they had it in their range of pattern packs. The packs can be hard to find and can be expensive now A couple of examples; https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Simplicity-Sewing-Pattern-1552-Medieval-Tunic-Cloak-And-Accessories/401924648368?hash=item5d94936db0:g:cvYAAOSwpDZcrGdQ https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Simplicity-Sewing-Pattern-9753-Mens-Medieval-Costume-Size-XS-M-Uncut/173927637220?epid=1643030098&hash=item287ee520e4:g:EXMAAOSwantbinUj I don't know what style you are needing but I have a couple of basic patterns for hoods I could share with you
  12. I'd go for the Osborne. afaik you can't really trust that the steel in the Stohlman is top grade these days.
  13. Le Prevo in Newcastle used to do 'bag lining'. A very stiff fabric type stuff. I have some somewhere but I've never used it With upholstery leather I double up the layers, sandwiching cereal box type cardboard in between. If a soft gusset is needed than that it left as a single layer
  14. Punter = an Ulsterism or Scots for a paying customer
  15. you can buy magnetic tape, by the metre. About £3 for 2 metres. Its the same stuff as used on fridge magnets
  16. I think you need to put your asking price. Its in the rules I think
  17. Thats another nice piece of work. Bestest wishes for the contest
  18. a suggestion, extreme measure - have you tried steaming it? get it into a sauna type place, let it steam for a while and whilst in there apply nfo by the sponge full I use to do this with my motorcycle boots about once every spring to soften them up after the wetting and salting they got over the winter months, although I used leather feed and olive oil
  19. This is not the case in the UK or Europe. Unless the originator of the pattern has given you permission to make items for commercial sale from the pattern then you may use the pattern only for personal use, you may not make multiples of the item and sell them, but you may give those items away as gifts
  20. For small size thread: 0.5 or 0.65mm pre-waxed polyester. It is available in a great variety of colours and even shades of those colours With 2oz or so I don't mark a stitch groove. I just draw a line with a pencil then use a 'pounce' wheel stitch marker to mark where the stitch holes will be. I can then sew up to four thicknesses of 2oz by hand without pre-punching or using an awl for making holes.
  21. a. There are/were a great many different styles (fonts) of letters in 3/4 inch. Which font do you need? * b. Was there ever a lower case set made for the type you have? as far as I can find out very few lower case sets were made to match certain type sets c. Presuming there was a set. Start checking every Tandy re-seller around the world to see if they have them. No. I'm not joking. It took me over a year contacting Tandy re-sellers in Europe, Asia, Australia and US to find one set of 1/2 inch lower case**. They had it as NOS, on a dusty shelf d. consider getting one of the Tandy Craftaids or books of designs and cut & carve the lower case letters - in fact do all the letters that way for consistency. e. if you think you're gonna use them often, consider getting them made. I went that way. I sent the lower case alphabet for a 3/4 inch type, with some repeat letters, to Le Prevo in England and they made me a sheet of the letters. I have to cut them out as blocks yet. They use a photo-etch system. I got the letters done as well as some designs for stamping. The lot cost me about £90. The letters are about 1/3 share of that f. * & ** I bought the lower case set first then bought the more readily available upper case set
  22. Bestest I can find is the Tandy on-line library https://www.leathercraftlibrary.com/product/1411/leather-flowers Adjust the pattern and dye 'em pink and you got roses
  23. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-china-51176409 Quote from the article linked to " Can the coronavirus be transferred through items bought from Wuhan and posted to UK? - Stefan There is no evidence this is a risk. Some diseases - including the coronavirus that causes Sars - can spread through surfaces contaminated by people coughing or sneezing on them. It has not been shown this new coronavirus can do that. Even if it could, there would still be questions about whether international shipping would be a major problem. Cold viruses tend to survive less than 24 hours outside the human body although norovirus (a severe stomach bug) can last months outside the body. The most reassuring fact so far is that cases seem to require close contact with another person - say, a family member or healthcare worker - in order to spread." (end quote) I've checked the addresses of the suppliers I buy from and none are in Wuhan nor even close. Most are close to Hong Kong
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