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fredk

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Everything posted by fredk

  1. Delivered this morning, a short time ago. Now to go play with it, and find a space on my cluttered work bench to bolt it to. There is no room on my lesser cluttered work benches for it
  2. btw I was just reducing that large roll of manilla to equivalent A4 sheets to compare with the pack of 160gsm x100 A4 sheets from Hobbycraft
  3. Yes, that will do. That will suit big patterns. That will give you approx 95 A4 sheets I use these from Hobbycraft; https://www.hobbycraft.co.uk/white-card-a4-100-pack/6509831000.html its slightly lighter at 160gsm and for patterns bigger than A4 I sellotape the sheets together. Also at A4 I can print out the likes of Tandy patterns and then sellotape the patterns together
  4. If its the heavy weight version, yes it is. The thinner lightweight isn't too good for patterns
  5. Damn it all ! I just bought one of these last night. £63.56 inc delivery and 10 spare blades. UK Seller. Delivery by the weekend or so. I could have got it a heck of a lot cheaper if I could wait 30 to 50 days for delivery but I have some projects on hand now that I can use it on My hand-held splitter will do to about 45-50mm width but the other day I realised I would like to split down some leather that will be 9 - 9.5 cm wide. Enter the bigger splitter
  6. I know this as a 'French Skiver' for taking down the inside edge of a piece, for thinning it prior to sewing it up This style I know as an edge beveller I also buy and use these cheap but decent little ones
  7. That looks the biz shure enuf
  8. I looked at their website. There were a few items I'd like but not available thru ebay. I may take a punt on one or two low priced items and see how it goes . . . . or maybe not
  9. Have you got access to a home kitchen blender? Chop up a big onion*, put in the blender with some warm, nearly hot, water, not a little amount, about 1 pint. Blend until you have a watery onion mush. Pour this through a strainer. Mix the resulting onion water into about 2 gallons of clean warm water. Dip a big sponge into the bucket, wring it out but leave it fairly wet. Wash this over the hide. 2 gals should do several hides *More onions = stronger solution
  10. No, the onions shouldn't turn to mush, they should just dry up. Onions are noted for eliminating fresh paint smells in a room and for getting rid of odd or bad smells in a refrigerator. Once you start to smell the onion you know its done its job then you replace it with a fresh cut lemon. The lemon scent eliminates the onion scent and when you smell the lemon you know its done its job as well I / we used to use this method for freshening the interior of 2nd hand cars Depends on how much work you wanna do on these hides. I'd make up a weak onion/water wash and sponge the hides down with that, maybe a couple of times. Not soaking wet, just sorta dampen them. Then if they take on the onion scent I'd sponge them down with a weak lemon/water wash. Leave them hanging where they can get plenty of fresh air around them jus sum thots
  11. No, the smell will still be on the items This should work, but I'd use cut up raw onions first, then sliced up real lemons after
  12. Thanks A good review. Not that I'm likely to buy one tho. I'm happy with my hand held splitter
  13. That looks fun I think the top binder clip could be eliminated by self-looping the elastic band
  14. This Tandy pattern has instructions and patterns for the pieces. The patterns start at page 15 Shoulder Holster Pattern 4416.pdf
  15. I once had a beagle hound who always managed to find the fresh wet cow pats when we went for a walk. Even in fields where no cattle were he found a wet pat to roll in. He used to walk home with head and tail held high, like he was proud of his new over-coat[ing]. He was a retired Crufts Dog Show champion. We reckoned he was rebelling against all the pampering and beautifying he used to get
  16. fredk

    nice blade

    They are easy enuf to get here in UK I used to use a lot of them but I never considered using them on leather. I must re-think that
  17. wot he says basically, my differences are; a fine needle file on the inside and a small diamond plate sharpener on the outside
  18. If it can do thin chrome tan veg tan will be a doddle
  19. Dilute the standard PVA wood glue with 'Mop & Glo' [?] floor varnish. Its an acrylic varnish and when added to the glue it makes it water-resistant when dry
  20. Once upon a time these were the 'bling' for working horses. They were often attached to straps which were then attached to draft-horse harness. Sometimes the brasses were left on all the time. Sometimes the brasses were only put on for shows Then from the 1960s thru the 1970s it was a fad to collect them and just hang them on straps around your rustic fireplace
  21. Both have their uses. I have both types in different spacing sizes The black ones are better for thread sewing and the silver ones, which make round holes and take away leather, are better for lace stitching
  22. Its not so much the wax, its the leather hole closing up. If you've made a sewing hole without removing any leather, ie with an awl or stitching chisels et cetera the hole will close up and tighten around the thread or lace
  23. If its possible, I too will sometimes bring the thread out between the layers of leather, but I just cut them off and tuck them back in away out of sight
  24. I sew the bottom of my dice cups with 1 mm thread or lace. Actually, all the thread sewing on my dice cups is 1mm thread, or if I need a certain colour I use 0.8mm thread because that colour isn't available in 1mm from where I buy it
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