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doubleh

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Posts posted by doubleh


  1. 11 hours ago, SUP said:

    @doubleh would that be like the wax you get from Montana Knife Company?

    I use ordinary Johnson's paste wax . It is no longer available but Min-Wax has about the same thing. One little tub will last for many years as long as you keep it sealed when not in use. If I use the knife regularly I use nothing, the benefit of residing in a low humidity area.


  2. Glad to hear it's Ok. A knife or other tempered tool can be saved by grinding away past the color. If using power tools you do have to be careful and not get in a hurry or you will just make it worse. Go slow and cool a lot. I do it bare handed to feel how hot the metal is getting. Something most people today forget about is this can be done with hand tools. A sharp file will cut most knife steel and there is no danger of overheating. file to shape, then sharpen, and you are good to go.


  3. Volume made does not translate into custom made. Personally I would return them and look for a true custom bootmaker. I don't know what custom bootmakers do today but the one I worked with many years ago measured your foot right there in his shop and fitted a last to each foot. They fit first time and he had customers come quite a distance to get a pair of boots made by him. Now it seems most things are made just to get them out the door as quickly as possible and to heck with the customer.


  4. Sometimes using it as a learning experience and making another that will fit is the least frustrating solution. I recently made my first border stamped slim jim holster. The border stamping turned out good but the slim part was too sim. When I wet it to form fit it the gun wouldn't go all the way in. I finally got it soaking wet and it still wouldn't and I didn't give up easily. Hard to do but in the trash can it went. My main trouble with the whole thing was dealing with my mistake. I have been doing leatherwork for many, many years and it really bothered me to make such a boo-boo.


  5. Around 1970 I made a wallet for my dad's birthday. It got little wear and tear as he was farmer and only carried it when going to town and it rode in a shirt pocket. I have never liked tooling thin leather and really disliked lacing one of these so I made very few.

    wyovMlxh.jpg

    While looking through boxes for another item earlier this week I ran across a newer project. This was from around 20 years ago and my essential tremors had barely begun. It's 8-9 oz. Herman's Oak, lined, and fits a Ruger BlackHawk. I was surprised that the leather was a little soft along the stitch line when I sewed it together and consider it a major flaw in my work. 

    aqGuyYSh.jpg


  6. That is a very nice hatband. Prairie rattlers are our predominate rattlesnake but diamondbacks are fairly common too and I have encountered a sidewinder once although It's been years since I have even seen a rattlesnake. Please clue me in on how you ethically dispatch one. Would using a hoe as the method of death of or shovel qualify? :lol: That was my most used method of dispatch until I decided to just let snakes be and continue to do their job of keeping small vermin in check. On the other hand i wouldn't mind buying a hatband sized skin from someone if I ever buy another hat.


  7. 16 hours ago, Gezzer said:

    That is NICE !!!!!  May I ask what kind of background tool did you use ?

    There were three tools used, all with the same size bottom pattern. All were craft tools from Tandy that I have used for many years and have forgotten the numbers of. One is a retangle shape for the larger spaces and the others were the same tool with a round nose and tapered tail. I ground one of them thinner and shorter to get into smaller places. I seldom dye a holster but will sometimes use Fiebing's tan antiquing paste to highlight one.

    Thanks to all for the kind words.


  8. Recent as in February of this year. I made the pattern and combined some of Al Stolman's and another's floral patterns plus drawing in some things to fill the corners to get this. Herman's 8-9 oz oak with a soft leather lining and right hand cross draw. Handstitched too. It's gun friendly as it will fit a single six, wrangler, or rough rider with a 4 1/2" barrel.

    vSdvcePh.jpg


  9. Time gets away and I should have said winter before last in my original post. Here is a picture of a belt I made for my tom boy oldest great grand daughter for her birthday that year. The different flowers are deliberate.

    93RMSuJh.jpg

    Fast forward three months and one for the next in line with blue eyes, hense the blue background. Her name is Bentley and when I found the Montana Silversmiths buckle it had to go on it. I had lost a little more rust.

    aX7BDyxh.jpg

     

     

     


  10. 23 minutes ago, Northmount said:

    What is the pill?  I tried one prescription propranolol  and in 3 days, anything that was red in colour would move around and even disappear.  Side effect is eye damage.  Stopped taking it, and in 3 more days my eyesight returned to normal.  Would sure like to find something safe that works for me.

    Primidone. It has been around for a verry long time and has few side effects but one of them you do not want if your are relatively young if you get my drift. My neurologist told me there only two drugs that will combat the tremors, both of which are the ones mentioned here. Propranolol slows your heart rate and since mine is already slow it's a no-no. There may have been a new drug come on the market but I haven't been told of one at my annual checkups. Primidone is dirt cheap and works pretty well for me so I am happy with it.

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