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Anna

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Posts posted by Anna


  1. Angebe,  I'm sure you will enjoy the your new to you machine.  I've been messing with mine a bit lately, since I've been thinking about selling it.  I know a lot more about sewing machines now than when we first got this about 10 years ago, so I can actually sew a lot better with it now.  It makes a nice tight stitch and will sew a pretty good range of leather thickness. 


  2. 14 hours ago, councilman24 said:

    If you decide to sell it advertise it on dropzone.com. This machine is desirable for sewing parachute harnesses with 5 cord in place of using a class 7.  If your not using it pass it on to someone who can keep it useful.

    Thanks for the advice on where to advertise.  I hadn't thought about parachutes.  It would be nice for it to be in use again. 


  3. 21 hours ago, 480volt said:

    I’m afraid I’m a tool junkie and I would be inclined to keep it. Looks to be in unusually good shape, right down to the paint. In my area, I have only seen one go up for sale in the past 2-3 years, if I remember correctly the seller was asking around 800.00, and it was posted on CL for months.

     

    Thank you for commenting.  I think it is in pretty decent shape, and it is an nice looking sewing machine.  I would like to keep it, but it would be nice for someone to get some use out of it too. 


  4. I have a Singer 132K6 sewing machine that has been sitting around for many years not being used.  I've been trying to decide if I should sell it, since it is just taking up space or if I should just hold onto it since it's a neat old machine.  I was just wondering if anyone knows if they are worth anything or if there is any interest in one.  It did sew nice when I did use it.  I would appreciate if anyone had some more information about this machine.  Thank you for your help!

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  5. Thanks for responding Keith. So far I have gotten the rigging skirts shaped down a lot more than they were just by wetting and strapping them down with the draw down strap. We have been on the go a bit lately so hopefully in a week or so I can get the seat shaped up and tacked down. Here's a picture of the skirts pulled down. post-9680-0-88626900-1438794737_thumb.jp

    Once again thank you to everyone for all the help on this.

    Anna


  6. Thank you both for your advice. I think I have some ideas to go from. Bob, I was planning on doing about 2" longer fenders and that should help them cover the rigging a little better, I hope. Thank you though for confirming that I should do so. We will see how everything fits after I get the seat leather tacked in place.

    Having him ride this saddle early was mostly to check on the shape of the ground seat. We also had some concerns about the rigging before the ride, but thought the rigging would be pulled down enough after he cinched up that it wouldn't rub so bad even without the fender change and the seat in. Oltoot, thank you for the picture of your style of in skirt rigging. I hope to be making more of these saddles and that will be helpful.

    I still might try wetting the rigging skirts and try to shape them down a little so they don't stick out so much. They should form that way anyway once the saddle is used. Is there any reason I shouldn't do that?

    Anna


  7. Hello,

    I need some advice on a saddle I am building. This is a first for me for many reasons. Two of those are, this is the first saddle I have built on a wood tree and this is the first in skirt rigging I have done. Which thank you to all who have provide input on these topics already on this forum.

    This saddle is for my husband, so I built it to the point where we could have him ride it, to try out the ground seat, so it is unfinished in these pictures. The stirrup leathers/fenders are not the ones that will go with this saddle when finished.

    The question I mainly have is, if there is any advice on how to fix or what to do about the in skirt rigging plate and where it rubs the riders leg? The skirts stick out and fallow the line of the saddle tree, hopefully you can see in the pictures. When my husband rode the saddle and it was cinched down on the horse it still really rubbed his leg. Should we wet the rigging and try to pull it down? Would pulling them in help or did I just get the rigging plate in a bad spot, or my leather too thick at the spot of the rigging plate? Once the seat is in, will that change how his leg sits over the rigging plate?

    Any other comments would be greatly appreciated as this is only the 4th saddle I have built and like I said there are a lot of firsts for me on this one.

    Thank you,

    Anna

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  8. Thank you all for the help. I am working with a new space out in the country so I don't have to worry about neighbors, cars or buildings. My husband has some ideas to build something for me for getting fumes out but we wanted to see how others are dealing with this in their shops. As soon as I'm working in the shop and not a room in my house I think I will be bothered less by the smells, at least then I can open up windows and not worry about cooling or smelling up the whole house. All your input has been very helpful. oltoot - I have always wondered what a doctor would say about these fumes especially from the Barge cement, thanks for mentioning that also!

    Anna


  9. I'm looking for help or an idea on how to get fumes out of my leather shop. I have a wall or ceiling I can put a vent though. The things I use most that have fumes are barge cement and leather dyes. Generally if at all weather permitting I try to do these things outside but I can't always do that.

    If anyone has a exhaust fan installed in their shop or if you have any experience with this I would greatly appreciate any help.

    Thank you,

    Anna


  10. Please take a look, but also, feel free to give me any advice or critiques.

    These are the first pair of fancy chaps I have made, so far. They were great fun to design and make, I am so proud that they are still whole and not a pile on the floor somewhere!

    The filigree on the tops and bottoms was a first for me, so I am sure there are teniques to doing this easier. Also sewing the name on and the metalic leathers in general was a new experience as all I have done before this was working type chaps.

    Anyway I hope you like them, and any advice to make the next pair I do even better, would be awesome!

    Anna

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  11. Hi all, I am trying to make a chaps/chinks display stand and am just wondering how others have built theirs. I don't have any handy to look at so I am just trying to go from what I remember or what pictures I find on line. I am planning on starting on it this week and it would be a great help if I could get some input on this. My plan is to make it out of wood and if that doesn't work out I will try to get my husband to weld one together for me. Thanks so much!

    Anna


  12. Thanks for responding Bruce. I think I have decided to put the strings through the skirts and the bars. It is going to be a saddle that is used on a ranch so it needs to be made to hold up. Anyway I just wanted to make sure I was not just creating unnecessary steps for myself by drilling holes in the bars and all that. Thanks for your help.

    ~Anna


  13. Hello everyone I have a question on the saddle that I'm making. My question: is it better to drill holes and put the saddle strings through the saddle tree or is it just as effective to nail or screw the saddle strings to the saddle tree under the leather? This is just the 2nd saddle that I have made and I am about to line the skirts and plug them but before I get to that I need to decided how I'm going to install the saddle strings. I've seen it done both ways and the first saddle I made I drilled holes and put the strings into the skirts. It seemed to work just fine. If anyone has advice for me that would be great. I usually get advice from a saddle maker down in Colorado but I came upon this site and it seems like there is a lot of knowledge floating around on this site so I thought I'd give it a shot. Thanks for your help.

    ~Anna

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