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Dwight

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Everything posted by Dwight

  1. Thanks, Camano, . . . Good job, Red Cent, . . . as before, . . . that is one of my favorite patterns. Been seeing it for over 50 years on belts, purses, and stuff. Can't say as I ever got tired of seeing it. May God bless, Dwight
  2. I searched both pages, the margins, the headers, . . . anybody seen the holster? May God bless, Dwgiht
  3. Goggle it my friend, . . . take the lesson you find there that sounds most logical. I have just about quit asking people, . . . I just do the Google, . . . asked a "people" a week ago about a feature on a sound mixing board he sold me, . . . when it didn't work, . . . Googled the right answer. You have a world at your fingertips, . . . use it. May God bless, Dwight
  4. Hicks, . . . ya done a good job there pardner. I am not a fan of ankle carry in any form, . . . but yours is the pattern I have made before for others, . . . who do seem to like them. And, . . . just as a comment, . . . I much prefer the real wool, . . . the synthetic stuff feels like a Walmart bag on my skin when it gets all hot and sweaty. And, . . . Well, Lobo, . . . we're probably about the same age, . . . because I remember complaining like the devil, . . . I bought my 4 inch Python for $160, . . . and they wanted $190 for the 6 inch model, . . . and I got all miffed and didn't buy it. Would I ever like to go back and re do that decision. But anyway, . . . I'm saying late 60's, . . . early 70's, . . . still in the prime. BTW, . . . you do know that since God told Noah that man's life would dwindle down to no more that 120, . . . that that makes 60 middle age. Just a little note there to help your day. May God bless, Dwight
  5. Yessir, . . . good looking. What does the knife itself look like? I enjoy seeing those hand made knives, . . . May God bless, Dwight
  6. Remove the rear (left side) clip, . . . take it to a grinder or sander, . . . remove all the metal you can up to about 1/8 of an inch below the rivet hole. That will make it tip forward a bit, . . . bring the butt end up out where it belongs. Then place it back in the holster, . . . shove it as far down as you can, . . . re-punch your hole, . . . it should make a good holster from what I can see here. Make your stitch lines tight to the frame of the gun, . . . you'll be doing two outlines, . . . down next to the weapon, . . . along the bottom, . . . then up the outside, . . . and across the top, . . . finish up at the bottom of the weapon for best looks, . . . double stitching about 4 or 5 stitches. The fact that you cannot stitch the very bottom is good, . . . it allows "stuff" to fall out the bottom and never plug up your barrel, . . . which produces a never forgotten moment. Honestly, I don't understand the trouble you are having with snaps, . . . the military has used plain old snaps for about a hundred years, . . . I've used em for many years, . . . just do not have a problem. Perhaps you are doing something wrong in the setting of the snap. If the male portion (bottom) is not secure, . . . fastened down tight, . . . they come unsnapped a bit easier, . . . but that's the best advice I know. Reverting to another type of snap is to ignore the bottom line problem you have now with snaps. May God bless, Dwight
  7. Looks good, . . . but then again, . . . I'm partial, . . . always did like that design. May God bless, Dwight
  8. My first two critiques, . . . the front stitch line, and the back stitch line. 1: Both are too far away from the piece, . . . wearing that as an OWB pancake, . . . it will open up and become loose pretty quickly. 2. Your back stitch line looks like it just wandered away from the weapon down at the muzzle end. Follow it around the trigger guard, . . . and stay close, . . . all the way down. You are also most likely boning your leather when it is really too wet. Boning needs to be done when the leather is almost dry, . . . otherwise it will "unbone" as yours has done. Personal preference: I hide the slots in Chicago screws, . . . let em see the pretty part, . . . not a screw slot. But, . . . in all honesty, . . . it is a heck of a lot better than my first couple of holsters. You're on the right track. . . . just polish the rails a bit, . . . you'll do OK. May God bless, Dwight
  9. Bob, . . . thanks for the tip, . . . spent about an hour "perusing" their offerings, . . . got a couple of ideas, . . . sent the questionaire off to her soon to be mother in law, . . . needed some advice, . . . but I think we are on the track. Now to get a bottle of Aussie and dig out those special pieces I saved. Yessir, . . . I think we have a plan. May God bless, Dwight
  10. If you google Ohio Travel Bag, . . . then on the left side, "view catalog", starting on page 3(?) through the next 8 or 10 pages is a ton of rivets, . . . they will have pretty much what is out there in the industry. You have several choices for brass, . . . but not precisely what you asked for. You could buy some longer solid brass rivets, . . . some brass washers, . . . and create your own, . . . but as said above, . . . they would not be as strong as the copper ones. May God bless, Dwight
  11. I started to get sarcastic, . . . say if the leather was as old as you and me, . . . ain't no wonder it wrinkled, . . . but you know I wouldn't do anything like that. But seriously, . . . I've had a couple of bouts with the wrinkle monster, . . . wish I had a definitive answer. I do know it seems to happen more with thicker leather than thinner. AND, . . . the one place I have whooped him, . . . is in the front inside of my lined holsters, . . . I do the John Bianchi skive on the inside piece, . . . takes them thar wrankles right out of the holster front. May God bless, Dwight
  12. Thanks, Joe, . . . I did a bag for a lady to carry her books in at the university, . . . not thinking, I "Resolened" it, . . . man was it stiff, . . . beautiful, . . . but stiff. If she had a small book in the bottom of it, . . . would have made a dandy weapon. I'll have to give the Aussie a shot, . . . May God bless, Dwight
  13. I'm a chap, chink, holster, belt, and knife sheath guy. These I can do. I have a very special lady getting married later this month, . . . and I want to make her a purse, . . . one she will treasure, . . . and I can do the whole thing except that super elegant finish. Most of my stuff gets Resolene, . . . Beeswax/NFO, . . . or Bag Kote. Her purse will be tooled, . . . not much but some, . . . shoulder strap, . . . either a largish clutch purse or small revival bag, . . . and probably out of nothing heavier than 8 oz. What will give her a soft feel, . . . warm touch, . . . and yet protect her bag? Thanks, guys, . . . this is a "once in a lifetime" shot for me to say "welcome to the family" to a very special young lady, . . . marrying a very special young man who happens to be my cousin. It needs to be right, . . . so I need your advice. Thanks, may God bless, Dwight
  14. It was really easy, Keith, . . . it's a concho, . . . not sure where I picked it up, . . . had two of them in my "other things" drawer, . . . dug it out, . . . took a look, . . . liked it, . . . used it. I'm thinking I bought it for a project that fell through, . . . but anyway, . . . it's just a pretty brass concho. May God bless, Dwight
  15. USMC black is a great dye, . . . goes deeper than the pro oil or any of the H2O stuff I've used, . . . but it leaves a pigment trail that a blind man could follow at midnight in a coal mine. I used to use it, . . . got sick and tired (arms got tired too) of all the buffing to remove the extra pigment, . . . moved to pro oil, . . . haven't looked back. May God bless, Dwight
  16. At this point, . . . your best bet is to grab a couple of towels your wife won't miss, . . . lay the project down and rub it like you are trying to rub the black off that pretty brown leather. It will take some elbow grease, . . . but it will be worth it when you are done. THEN, . . . find a large wash cloth (again something she won't miss), . . . wet this one, . . . have at it again. Don't quit until you no longer get any black coming off the bag. Then put a coat of 50/50 Resolene & water on the project, . . . and a second coat on anything that will touch the owner's saddle. Next time, . . . use something like Feibings professional black oil dye, . . . but stay away from USMC black, . . . and cut the dye 50/50 with Feibings thinner. May God bless, Dwight
  17. I have a box full of leather pieces, . . . and among them are the "lesson pieces" that were salvaged from the project that in a different frame of mind would have gotten hung up on my rifle range and used for target practice. Throwing them in the box, . . . allows me to salvage any good leather that may be there, . . . and also reminds me of my humanity, . . . something that every now and then we all tend to forget, . . . But like Electrathon alluded to, . . . there are times when you realize that this is NOT ever going to be a properly finished product, . . . so it just becomes a lesson piece. May God bless, Dwight
  18. There are a couple of cowboy chap videos out there (haven't seen them in a long timel . . . but I have viewed them), . . . that use an old pair of YOUR jeans as the pattern for YOUR chaps. Having had MC chaps in the past, . . . I would not doubt that it would work for MC chaps too. You just may have to do a bit of doctoring. One mistake some folks make with chaps, . . . put your zippers on upside down, . . . so you close the zipper from the top, . . . not from the bottom. Make your trial set out of a pair of jeans from a second hand store that is one size too big for you, . . . I think you'll like the fit, . . . I also make some of my chap "trials" out of heavy vinyl (about $20 USD per yard at JoAnn fabric, . . . it's $12 USD with a 40% off coupon, . . . and one yard will make a set of MC chaps for a petite woman. You then transfer the vinyl pattern to leather, . . . VOILA, . . . you are done. May God bless, Dwight
  19. If you haven't already, . . . you might try dunking it, . . . in water, . . . it doesn't look veggie tanned, . . . but that will be the test that will tell. Personally, I would be tempted to get a veg tan belt strip, . . . lace it all around the top up there, . . . soak it down with hot water and set it in the sun, . . . if you bend it where you want it, . . . it will help, . . . will not cure, . . . If you REALLY want it to hold that square shape, . . . lace on the strip, . . . but put a piece of 18 gauge aluminum between the layers, . . . bend the aluminum, . . . it will work. But remember in the end, . . . leather doesn't really lend itself to bags like that, . . . think "saddlebags", . . . they always have a clasp, and a top to pull them together. May God bless, Dwight
  20. I just fold my outside over, . . . Chicago Screw it together, . . . no problems. (I apologize that one layer is thicker than the other, . . . not intended, . . . just a cranky drawing program today, . . . almost all my belts are either the same thickness, or the inside is 1 or 2 oz thinner) May God bless, Dwight
  21. Eh, . . . Camano, . . . thassa gooda worka you do, Bambino, . . . mebbe you comuh uppa to Shytown, . . . we getta you somma work, . . . mebbe somma inna de Bronx too. Da boss, . . . he lika whata you do. May God bless, Dwight
  22. If you are using a sail needle (round handle with spool in the middle, needle out front), . . . you are not allowing any slack in your thread. To use one of them and not get dye, dirt, gunk, trash all over your pretty white thread, . . . the piece pushed through should be at least a foot longer than the whole final piece. Once you push it through, . . . make the stitch, . . . then pull out the slack. Yeah, . . . I know, . . . wastes thread, . . . but it WILL keep your thread from getting all gunky. That also works if you are saddle stitching, . . . sometimes folks will needle up real close to where they are sewing, . . . and that will get your thread dirty. Put your needles out on a piece of thread you are going to cut off and add to the trash barrel. And you don't want to know how long it took me to learn those UGH ! May God bless, Dwight
  23. Another trick, . . . use an inside mold, . . . I do that with my holsters, mag pouches, and lots of other "stuff". The marks are on the inside, . . . for a fold like you have in the front or back, . . . I simply hold it in my hands (with inside mold in place) and hold it down as I roll from back to bottom then from bottom to front. It makes the sharp bend I want, . . . I do it on a perfectly smooth counter, . . . there are no marks, . . . and I would just leave the piece inside and lay it flat on it's back for an hour or so, . . . then gently remove the inside mold and allow it to finish air drying. May God bless, Dwight
  24. Personally, . . . I'd go with another 6 oz, . . . which only makes a 12 oz belt overall, . . . which for concealed carry is just on the lower edge of my belts. Most of my bets are made of an 8 and a 7, . . . or thereabouts. May God bless, Dwight
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