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Newfman

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  • Content Count

    146
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About Newfman

  • Rank
    Member
  • Birthday 10/30/1964

Contact Methods

  • Website URL
    http://www.DManske.com
  • ICQ
    0

Profile Information

  • Gender
    Male
  • Location
    Fort Worth, Texas
  • Interests
    Horses and Hoof rehabilitation.
    Commercial Photography, Product, Food, Editorial, Equine, Lifestyle

LW Info

  • Leatherwork Specialty
    None. . .yet
  • Interested in learning about
    Saddle making
  • How did you find leatherworker.net?
    Luck. . .google tree makers

Recent Profile Visitors

8,722 profile views
  1. Sold! Sold on eBay. They are heading to Australia.
  2. THese aren't so easy to come by these days, so I thought I'd give a last minute heads up. https://www.ebay.com/itm/Dale-Harwood-Saddle-Making-DVD-2-Disc-set/183204673767?hash=item2aa7d978e7:g:A8EAAOSwQ~ha6KTy
  3. Selling my Harwood DVD. Very good condition. $150 including shipping, USPS Flat Rate Priority Mail.
  4. Hello Bob! Thank you for the warm welcome back. I completely understand the sentiment about 'pics not doing justice'. There is so much hard work, craftsmanship, and artistry that goes into making these cowboy trappings that it is a shame that everyone doesn't have the resources to show their works in the best 'light' possible. I hope that I can at least help some of the craftsmen in my new home region. Saddles may be a bit unwieldy to ship for images for most makers, but smaller items can ship without a problem. It adds to the overall cost, but if you are just wanting a handful of examples for your website, it may ultimately be cost effective. If you have a good commercial product photographer in your area, it could be a good business move to work something out with them for your images. Rambles to the community.... There is a big trend to shoot everything on black, or clip the product and drop it on a black background. There is a richness to leather and black when you put them together, but they also tend to look very flat because the product is sucked into the blackness of negative space. Beautiful saddles look like they have been sliced from horn through the jockey laces like they are some sort of weird half-saddle. Most saddles come with two stirrup leathers and stirrups, but in those images, you see just one. I realize the off side stirrup isn't pretty on the backside, but it is still part of the saddle. Good lighting will downplay the lack of tooling, but will still give your saddle a more three-dimensional look. The other thing I have noticed is the image files are so small that, as a prospective buyer, you can't get a close-up view of the detail. I have to wonder just how many times people have felt compelled to run their fingertips across the toolings of fine leather when they see it in person. Like, pretty much everyone. With photos, you can't do that of course, but people still want to really get a sense of the workmanship. The potential buyers that get an emotional reaction to viewing your work are the ones that will buy from you more readily. No matter who is photographing your work, you should put files up that are at least 1500 pixels across on the long edge, so that people can bring it up full screen on their monitors and really feel like they are as close to being in the room with your leather work as possible. Hig quality close-ups of detail with good lighting is also important because they get to see the fine nuances of your workmanship, which they are not normally privy to if you live far away. On my website, I upload as large an image as I can, limited by the website software. Am I afraid someone will steal my images? Yes, to some extent. Hey, if you love Cannolis so much that you want to steal the image from my website and use it as a background on your computer, knock yourself out! I'd be honored. Even more so if you appreciated me with the photo credits. Of course, should you try to sell it as your own, to a company for advertising, it is going to cost you a lot of money in back licensing fees and attorney's But, there is nothing worse to me when I think I am interested in a product to purchase and I click on it to make it bigger and it moves to a new page, but is the same darn tiny size it originally was! Makes me wonder what they are hiding. So, there are some rambling thoughts for ya! Now if I can figure out how to get notices of comments to threads...
  5. Hey Folks, Been a very long time since I have posted anything. Years ago I was very interested in making saddles and learning the trade. I ended up getting very busy in the career field I left years ago, and found myself back in. Commercial Photography. I had my business in Maine and just shut my studio down and have since moved to Denton Texas, just nort of Dallas and Fort Worth. My goal is to expand my business to include equine photography for ads and promos. (not a show photographer) But, I still do studio work. SO, if any of you saddle, tack or makers of other fine cowboy trappings need professional images of your products for web or catalog, give me a shout and lets see if we can put something together for you. Feel free to look at some of my various projects at my website wwwDManske.com I am sure there are craftsmen and women in the area that could use some good images for their business. My contact info is on my website. Glad to See Leatherworker is still going strong! Best regards, Dennis Manske
  6. That's an interesting point George. People that know me, often comment that what little I have is usually of the highest quality. I will go years without, before buying something cheap. It isn't always avoidable, but it is more the case than not by far. The down side is that my high quality things make me look like a snob or I have a lot of money. I don't and I am not. It just takes a lot of restraint to wait and save to buy the best or high quality. It takes even longer if you are spending money on cheap crap in the mean time.
  7. I hope the horse fared better than the saddle. Of course you felt an obligation to repair the saddle in that situation. I get it. That being said, that looked like a pretty durn nice repair job. No doubt you are right, stronger than the original. I wouldn't ride in it, but that is a good looking repair. I hope that comes out on your computer, the way it sounds in my head. More simply. . . nice job. Dennis
  8. Weird, I was thinking the same thing and then I read Terry's post and it was like, whoa, i already said that, only. . .I didn't. Weird. Just havin' a moment. Really though, Flashy is nice but sometimes simple and clean is just right. Really nice. Plus, you made it. how cool is that?!?! Dennis
  9. I use a dog collar. I guess I should upgrade.
  10. That's um. . .geez. . .um. . .Nope, still speechless.
  11. I'll have to get back to you. Presently. . .I'm gobsmacked.
  12. StandardBred racers have Pacers and Trotters. The off track Pacers usually have to be retrained to trot to find homes for them. The raceorse owner/trainers isn't going to bother. They just dump them. Go figure. You can cover a lot of ground, real fast on a pacer, and he isn't likely to break gate. Pretty smooth as Sylvia posts. Now there is a horse that needs to be fitted for a saddle. They have Lonnngggg backs, tend a little towards mutton withers and broader backs. Really nice horses to rescue off the track if you want a good, but inexpensive horse. You'll also have to get his feet back under him. Many track farriers seem to have forgotten anatomy.
  13. Both posted the same thing at 11:10. Pretty funny. What are the odds on that?!
  14. I found this: http://www.saddlemakersshopmanual.info/Order_Now.html Hope it helps. Dennis
  15. For a better evaluation of your situation, you may want to post pictures of your own saddle. An over-all photo, and then set your camera to close-up (macro or the 'flower' symbol if so equipped) and get some good close-ups of the stain. Like from a few inches away. Blurry out of focus photos won't help, so keep shooting as close as you can until you get good, clean, sharp photos and then post them here. Confuseus say, A bird in the hand is easier to identify, than the one hiding in the bush. Thats's not really how that goes. . .is it?!?!?
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