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Everything posted by MikeRock
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Is this Leather Belting for a sewing machine?
MikeRock replied to RWL2's topic in Leather Sewing Machines
Somewhere here in the 'stuff' is a little pliers/punch combination tool for punching the holes in round belting, very specific to that. It has a pliers gizmo for bending the wire clip to final shape too. Got it off fleabay with a bunch of leather tools out of an old shop. I used it once making up round belting for my old sock knitting machine bobbin winder and it worked great. -
Distressed Bison side, does this look right?
MikeRock replied to undead's topic in All About Leather
I've skinned a few.... that is not acceptable. -
I wonder if there is a water or solvent soluble ink that would completely clean off after tooling? Neat idea, transferring ink via a waxed paper.
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Like I said before, brings back great memories......THANK YOU!! God bless
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I sure like it. Like all your work, it reminds me of some of the calendar paintings of small town America fifty years back. Nice!
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Welcome! Do you know of any good BSA Gold Star parts bikes? Mike
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Call Dana Gleason as Mystery Ranch, Bozeman, MT. Best in the west and everywhere else.
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Union Lockstitch Sewing Machines, Why?
MikeRock replied to Gulrok's topic in Leather Sewing Machines
They are a beast. I have made replacement parts for the bobbins and other odds and ends. The Amish shop I learned a lot at had two of them, powered by air motors. The young guy told me that Amish machines sewed to beat Hell! He had a wooden guide setup for doing tugs and ran the machines flat out when he could. Building didn't quite shake, but it was close. Nicest stitch you want to see. Hot wax, propane flame. The girls there used them for collar work, the guys did harness work. They had the setup to do hidden stitches, in the slit made by the old Gomph hand tools. They hooked me on Gomph and HF Osborne. Old cast iron crupper stuffers and six station crupper molds.....fun times. -
Have you considered cutting on the radius, like a conic section? The hip area isn't cylindrical and a belt that wide won't stretch into a conic shape. Just a thought. My first belt was for tree work in the mid sixties and I learned fast that a cylinder was damned uncomfortable sixty feet up. God bless Oh....NICE work!!
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Looking for a Glover's Donkey / Clamp - Pictures included
MikeRock replied to kskinner's topic in Leather Tools
Interesting. Are the jaws spring loaded in the normally closed position, and depressing the foot pedal opens the jaws? God bless -
Leather for holsters, knife and tool rolls
MikeRock replied to Northmount's topic in All About Leather
Tom, Thank you for passing this on. Great information from the horses mouth, so to speak. You should pin this post. God bless, Mike- 4 replies
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- chrome tanned
- corrosion
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Duane Watts' swivel knife is what I want to try. $110 last I checked. https://youtu.be/vI8tW30tn58 Video Unavailable.....at least to me.
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leather face mask cover
MikeRock replied to Frodo's topic in Purses, Wallets, Belts and Miscellaneous Pocket Items
Looks like that Batman character Bane, with the mask. Does it make your voice deeper and scary Neat! -
Thursday, August 13, 2020 1950s America survives... in Japan A fascinating phenomenon that William Gibson first noted in his "cool hunter" novels some years ago turns out to not only be real, but a viable business in Japan: Takashi Tateno keeps an office in a simple studio above his wife’s hairdressing salon on the outskirts of Okayama, a medium-sized city in central Japan. In fashion circles, Okayama is famous for one thing: making the world’s best denim, using looms that date back to the 1950s. But Tateno isn’t a denim head. His brand, called Workers, adapts all sorts of American work wear from the 1900s to the ’60s—railroad jackets, canvas dusters, flannel shirts, double-kneed pants. Moreover, he’s obsessed by the American workers who manufactured these garments in their heyday, and the skills, techniques and tools used to produce such high-quality clothing on an industrial scale. Before he hatched the idea of his own collection, Tateno spent years making clothes himself and working in a factory. At the same time, he launched a Japanese-language website that was absolutely alone in its single-minded pursuit of knowledge about the plans, patterns and procedures that old American work-wear manufacturers used to make their garments under such labels as Crown, W.M. Finck & Co. and Can’t Bust ’Em. Tateno journeyed to the United States multiple times to sift through archives and contact heirs to now-defunct clothing manufacturers to see if they had information about their ancestors’ businesses, and to buy up examples of the old clothes he loved so he could dissect their construction. Tateno ushers me into his upstairs space. One room is filled with all kinds of clothing, everything from the work wear he collects to contemporary Italian jackets by Boglioli. There is also machinery, including an ancient riveting machine, plus old sewing-machine accessories that Tateno purchases so the factories he hires to produce his collection can make things to the exact specifications of, say, 1924 or 1942, with the same tools in use back then. “When I learned to sew and tried to make these garments myself, I began to realize just how intricate the work was, what kind of tremendous skill level was required to turn out such huge quantities of high-quality garments,” Tateno says. “These were produced at a time when American workers were the most knowledgeable and skilled in the world.” Though the kind of skilled manufacturing he admired in these garments had largely disappeared in the United States—a consequence of apparel production moving abroad and garment workers no longer finding work—he saw older Japanese people around him in Okayama with high-level sewing skills. And so he realized that if he could unearth the manufacturing secrets behind these old garments, he could make them in Okayama—and perhaps make them even better than the originals. The cult of the artisan is ensconced in contemporary urban American culture. This is the ideal of a person who can handcraft a pair of jeans or a necktie, conscious of the most minute details of fabric, workmanship and authenticity. The era Tateno’s clothing harks back to is not the age of the lone artisan laboring over a single creation, though; it’s the era of packed factories in Pennsylvania, Virginia and California churning out thousands and thousands of high-quality garments at a reasonable price, all because of the workers’ skill. The irony is that this ideal of the American worker, which sounds like something lifted from old-school union advertising copy, can be hard to find in America today. Japan. It's the one place in the world where the present is as fascinating as the past. Labels: Americana, history posted by VD @ 8/13/2020 05:36:00 AM Mailing List signup 0 comments
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https://www.superiorthreads.com/thread/kevlar/c/60-204 That should do. God bless
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Quite a find, Bronze age harness so well preserved that they can see how the harness was assembled. Pretty darn cool!! https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-scotland-south-scotland-53714864 God bless Detectorist 'shaking with happiness' after Bronze Age find 10 August 2020 Image copyright Crown Copyright Image caption Items believed to be pieces of the Bronze Age harness were also found A metal detectorist was left "shaking with happiness" after discovering a hoard of Bronze Age artefacts in the Scottish Borders. A complete horse harness and sword was uncovered by Mariusz Stepien at the site near Peebles in June. Experts said the discovery was of "national significance". The soil had preserved the leather and wood, allowing experts to trace the straps that connected the rings and buckles. This allowed the experts to see for the first time how Bronze Age horse harnesses were assembled. Image copyright Dariusz Gucwa Image caption Mariusz Stepien discovered the hoard near Peebles in June Mr Stepien was searching the field with friends when he found a bronze object buried half a metre underground. He said: "I thought 'I've never seen anything like this before' and felt from the very beginning that this might be something spectacular and I've just discovered a big part of Scottish history. "I was over the moon, actually shaking with happiness." Mr Stepien and his friends camped in the field as archaeologists spent 22 days investigating the site. He said: "Every day there were new objects coming out which changed the context of the find, every day we learned something new. "I'm so pleased that the earth revealed to me something that was hidden for more than 3,000 years. I still can't believe it happened." Image copyright Crown Copyright Image caption Archaeologists found a sword still in its scabbard during their excavation Archaeologists found a sword still in its scabbard, decorated straps, buckles, rings, ornaments and chariot wheel axle caps. There is also evidence of a decorative "rattle pendant" that would have hung from the harness, the first to be found in Scotland, and only the third in the UK. Emily Freeman, head of the Crown Office's Treasure Trove Unit, said it was "a nationally-significant find." She said: "So few Bronze Age hoards have been excavated in Scotland, it was an amazing opportunity for us to not only recover bronze artefacts, but organic material as well. "There is still a lot of work to be done to assess the artefacts and understand why they were deposited." The beginning of the Bronze Age in Britain can be put at about 2,000 BC.
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Look for a complete shuttle for Pearson model 2
MikeRock replied to Philaupatte's topic in Leather Sewing Machines
Thanks!~ -
Look for a complete shuttle for Pearson model 2
MikeRock replied to Philaupatte's topic in Leather Sewing Machines
Isn't that a clone of the Landis #1? Sharon?? -
Dürkopp 18 Patcher Restoration - long journey...
MikeRock replied to Constabulary's topic in Leather Sewing Machines
On needles........I just went through a series of emails asking Schmetz to simply make a longer thread groove in 26-200, 26-230, 26-250 and 26-300 needles. Just an additional 0.600" of grind, no other changes. The Chicago branch sent it to Germany and they told me first that they could do it. I offered to have a hundred of each needle modified. Next they told me that a Landis #1 was an awl and hook machine and they were not interested. I sent them part photos and the fact that we use Schmetz needles now, courtesy of Eli. They then got snooty and said due to Covid they were not interested........ It's not polite to swear on this site so I won't. That is Scmetz for you......... I guess I'll set up one of my tool and cutter grinders with a 1" dia. high speed diamond and grind the damned things myself. -
Do any of your vintage machine users know the composition of 'hard winter wax'? It was melted in thread lubrication pots and the thread was passed through the hot wax, then excess was stripped off by a rubber stripping grommet. The stuff found in old Landis and Union Lockstitch wax pots is hard, black, and brittle with age. Any information on these oldish waxes would be appreciated. God bless
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Second from bottom photo, far right object with varying width grooves........ for 'setting' the teeth in a hand saw. Called a 'saw wrest'. God bless Any old sewing machines, like an old Landis? Ask if he might have old wax melting pots off a Landis. Never know!!
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If you remember the movie, "Medicine Man", with Sean Connery, there was a scene where he's wearing a mask..... Tucan. Then Dr. Crane shows up and the one liners are pretty bad......fun movie.
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Wiz, Thank you for this link. I had seen their liquid but not this. Hopefully this is THE stuff! Will order Monday. Enjoy the 4th. God bless
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Wiz, What kind of wax was used in the Landis #1 wax pots? Old pots have what looks like cold tar that will shatter if you pry on it or chip at it. The manual suggests that as the tallow in the mix is used up to add more tallow, but there is no recipe for the was mixture. Any help would be appreciated...