grimdaddy
Members-
Content Count
14 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Calendar
Blogs
Gallery
Store
Everything posted by grimdaddy
-
Where did you find this hardware if you don't mind me asking? I'm trying to make my own swivel holster but cannot find the correct hardware
-
686 Swivel Holster
grimdaddy replied to willlord's topic in Gun Holsters, Rifle Slings and Knife Sheathes
Sounds interesting, there's not too many of those around, I'll have to have a look. -
686 Swivel Holster
grimdaddy replied to willlord's topic in Gun Holsters, Rifle Slings and Knife Sheathes
After some inquiries and searching other posts, I've found that Standing Bear's Trading post sells them here . You''ll have to either email or call them because it's a special order item, but from memory they're about 7 bucks + s&h. I'm gonna grab a few once i've got my pattern taken care of. -
686 Swivel Holster
grimdaddy replied to willlord's topic in Gun Holsters, Rifle Slings and Knife Sheathes
Hi mate, i know it's been a while but I'm actually working on my own "Walking Dead" holster inspired by the 42A, using an actual plain holster as the pattern. I managed to find a place that sells the swivel, and identified all the hardware. Would you like to know the seller? Cheers -
Thanks y'all, i figured it would be best to use an exacto knife after applying heat and water, but i just wanted you guys' opinion, as i'm fairly new to leathercrafting. I appreciate all the replies :)
-
Hey y'all, I've decided to attempt to disassemble a patrolman swivel holster, and I figured that while the unstitching part would go easily enough, the contact cement would go differently. I've read that acetone will dry out and crack the leather (which i want to keep as a pattern to make a copy of the holster), and I've also heard that heat is helpful, melting the contact cement i guess. I don't have any experience with contact cement, what do you guys reckon?
-
Stamping a leather holster
grimdaddy replied to grimdaddy's topic in Gun Holsters, Rifle Slings and Knife Sheathes
sounds like a good idea. I've decided to purchase the plain holster, disassemble it, and use it as a pattern to create my own. This way, I could make several and sell them to people as replicas! They'll be practically the same, just without the logo stampings obviously. I think people would prefer this to paying up to $1000 for an actual holster. -
Hi, I'm in the process of making my own swivel holster, modelled of the TeX Shoemaker 42A holster. I have however run into a bit of a fix, as I can't seem to figure out where to purchase this swivel. Could you guy please lend me a helping hand and enlighten me? I've circled the swivel into the picture attached.
-
Stamping a leather holster
grimdaddy replied to grimdaddy's topic in Gun Holsters, Rifle Slings and Knife Sheathes
No problem, I'm in Queensland, Australia. -
Stamping a leather holster
grimdaddy replied to grimdaddy's topic in Gun Holsters, Rifle Slings and Knife Sheathes
I'm located in Queensland, Australia What brand of holster was the one you have? -
Stamping a leather holster
grimdaddy replied to grimdaddy's topic in Gun Holsters, Rifle Slings and Knife Sheathes
In regards to buying the swivel, what would I search to find it? I think I'll go with what all of you suggested and just use the holster as a pattern and make a new one. -
Stamping a leather holster
grimdaddy replied to grimdaddy's topic in Gun Holsters, Rifle Slings and Knife Sheathes
Thanks for all of the responses guys! I've decided to purchase the holster, unstitch it, and try as best as i can to stamp and dye the leather using the pattern of the holster. My only question: should I use something like saddle soap to soften the holster and get it flat so that i can copy the pattern? -
Stamping a leather holster
grimdaddy posted a topic in Gun Holsters, Rifle Slings and Knife Sheathes
I've been looking for a particular basketweave holster made by Tex Shoemaker (the model being 42A) , but have been discontinued and are thus super rare to find. I have however found the same holster but without the basketweave pattern for much cheaper. This got me thinking, is there a way to un-stitch the holster and flatten it out (maybe using something like saddle soap to makethe leather soft), and use a basketweave stamping tool to make the basketweave pattern, stitch it back up, and shape the holster using my revolver. Do you guys think this would wok? I'm new to leathercrafting and i don't want to spend $150 odd on a project that is doomed. I have attached photos of the two photos so you can see what i'm talking about.