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BeltFanDan

Members
  • Content Count

    40
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About BeltFanDan

  • Rank
    Member

Contact Methods

  • AIM
    beltfandan
  • Website URL
    http://
  • ICQ
    0

Profile Information

  • Gender
    Male
  • Location
    New York

LW Info

  • Leatherwork Specialty
    Championship Belts
  • Interested in learning about
    Tooling
  • How did you find leatherworker.net?
    Google

Recent Profile Visitors

2,962 profile views
  1. University of Central Florida reached out to me after the Peach Bowl for this.
  2. Apparently, a bunch of belt people stalk me on FB, so when I liked your page, people checked it out. Your videos are also helping get tons of new followers.
  3. Andrew said you been helping him out for 5 years now? How that come about? Also congrats on all the new Facebook likes. Seems the secret got out and you are blowing up!
  4. Plates are zinc that are acid etched using photonegatives. Cast plates haven't been used in a long time. Too heavy and they crack easily.
  5. I make them for companies, TV shows, sports teams and private collectors...... Basically if the check clears....
  6. A few people use those plates, but it's frowned upon by most belt collectors and seen as "cheating". Most prefer/want the hand tooled snap box areas, even with the flaws that naturally come with them. It would save a ton of time though....
  7. Some work from 2017. Still trying to work on a few things.... Think I need a new knife.
  8. I tried all the tutorials trying to use a sponge, lambs wool, brushes, etc. Could never get it right. A friend told me if it was something serious, then I should invest in an airbrush set up. I already had a pancake compressor so I just needed the gun setup. Got a good Paasche set up for under $200 including a variety of tip sizes, quick connects, and jars. It took a little trial and error but it was well worth it. If you are doing any colors other than black or dark brown, in bulk, airbrushing is a life changer.
  9. I tried for years unsuccessfully. Now I airbrush everything. Only way I can get uniform color on such large projects. With oil based dyes, I cut it 50% with alcohol. With water based, cut it 50% with water. Several light sprays with the airbrush. It allows me to build the color up evenly, and slowly. Applying it straight up with a sponge or brush always came out too dark, and uneven.
  10. Most people just get their feet wet releathering the mass produced replicas. They come with bad vinyl straps that crack. There is a huge demand for someone in Canada do offer this service because international shipping and customs makes the price not worth it.
  11. At one point I was buying a CNC machine to do my own plates. If that happened, it wouldn't be a problem making my own custom stamping plates. Unfortunately, I'm not doing that. I've been trying to find old leather stamps that are not made with some unique designs, but that's not reliable. Trying to find some out of the box thinking. My main areas are "fill" for the snap boxes like above, then the border that goes around all the plates like attached
  12. I make Championship Belts like the ones used on TV by big companies. The majority of my work has been replicating the straps that those who have come before me have done; replicating their style. I am trying to come up with new/unique ways to tool my belt straps, without turning them into long, laborious projects. Due to the amount of orders I get and the expected turn around time, I'm lucky to have a few hours to work on a single strap. While many of the intricate designs of traditional leatherwork would be great on a strap, the customers simply aren't going to pay for the labor. Attached are some different tooling styles I have been plating around with. I guess I'm at a road block and looking on some advice on some different stamps, techniques or designs to incorporate into my work. Thank you Insert existing attachment Due to the size limit here, my full gallery is available on my website, BeltsByDan.com
  13. Looks great. Gonna pick one up this weekend. See how there is breaks in the post so it folds over? I have to do that manually with needle nose pliers with Tandy snaps, then I can use the normal anvil and hand tool to finish it off. Such a pain and waste of time.
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