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Everything posted by SUP
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😄 What word do you use in its place?
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Others have probably tried this already but since I discovered it new for myself, I thought of putting it up here. I use thick leather splits as punching mats. I often also use a block of wax. I sometimes place the split piece on the wax block so that even if the punch goes through, it just gets lubricated with wax. When I was last melting the wax block to smoothen it, I dipped the leather split piece in the melted wax. I let it absorb for a minute or two on both sides and then kept it aside to dry. It dried hard, harder than the original split and it works well as a punching mat. For the wax, I used a mix of paraffin wax and beeswax. Plain paraffin is too brittle and pure beeswax is too sticky. Together, they work well for me, both in block form as well as in the punching mat.
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Okay. I'll try that. Thank you.
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Yes, that is what I am looking for. Yes. You could start a new thread. With other people adding their knowledge to it, the thread could become informative enough for the moderator to pin it. Otherwise search terms do not always give what one needs. This information might be present in the forum elsewhere but it did not come up with my searches. For some reason, no matter what I do, the searches only show results pertaining to each word, not phrases. And I know how to do searches online but this forum gives me a whole lot of trouble there.
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Oh! Then everything I have is sharp enough. I have things going half way through my fingers all the time! Planning to buy share in a band aid company.😄 Seriously, That means really sharp. I will work on my awls.
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Just checked and noticed that my pliers are all grooved! Another stop in my shopping today. @zuludogthat is a lot of very good, detailed information. I do many of the things there, other things, not. I have not sharpened my awl. I will need to do that, a least a little. Now that I think of it, it feels a little blunt and needs to be forced. About having the needles etc. all absolutely straight, I just discovered that recently when I realised that a needle was bent and going somewhere else from where I was directing it. Changed it in a hurry. About piercing the thread, I'm going to try that. I keep the thread long anyway and do not try to have one long thread for the entire side. So I can change the thread more frequently. I work with a stitching pony too, a clam actually. But when the leather is very thick, it has been difficult. I'm hoping with the right needles, thread, sharpened awl and pliers, it will become easier. I plan to get all the items mentioned here that I could use, including the smooth jawed pliers. @zuludogMaybe you could put this information up in a different thread so that other newbies can benefit from it.
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I don't have that. Will need to order them. I do have thin gloves that I made for stitching to prevent 'blood sacrifices' as I stitch. Maybe I can attach something on the palms as well. No idea about the makes. Those that I ordered are John James; some I bought from Tandy. Others from Amazon Vine which are actually fine for ordinary leatherwork - bags and other sundry items. I plan to check what Tandy has in stock today, else order John James online. I need to ensure that the needles that I purchase do not widen at the eye. I checked, and all mine do. So adding the thickness of the thread, it is not surprising that the needles break, I guess. About attaching the thread, I do the S-knot. Sometimes I just pierce the thread with the needle and pull it through to lock it in position.
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Yes, I will be punching the stitching holes. But I have had trouble earlier where the needles have broken, even with punched stitching holes. I was probably using the wrong sized needles. I do have needles with bigger eyes but then the problem that arises is pushing them through the stitching holes. With the thread, the eye area thickens and can stick and then break, pliers notwithstanding. I will enquire with the Tandy folk. All that armour that they seem to be making all the time is made of pretty thick leather, so they will know about hand-stitching thick leather. I will keep that in mind for the current and all future projects. A trip to Tandy is evidently in the cards today. They have a sale going on serendipitously! Thank you @fredk and @zuludog for your guidance.
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I want to make simple leather sandals - with a leather sole - about 14 oz of veg tanned leather, a mid-sole - about 10oz and the insole about 5oz. So it will be pretty thick. Which needles can I use to stitch through such thickness? I have ordinary ones that have all got mixed up, so I decided to get appropriate ones to make these sandals. I would appreciate guidance on this.
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I read somewhere in the last couple of days about adding something or the other that keeps bone glue liquid. If I find it again, I will put it up here. I might have found it on a thread here but I'm not sure. Oh you've recently started getting immigrants. The world is really shrinking, is it not? I just looked up the information on bone glue. The recipe says to add isopropyl alcohol to keep it liquid. No idea whether it works. Besides in the video, they kept it uncovered and the alcohol will evaporate and the glue will thicken. More research needed.
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Wow! I did not know that! PVA glue cups. And what a coincidence seeing someone wearing the same footwear! Many men wear them in South Asian countries and bring them along when they migrate. They are very comfortable. The leather usually needs a bit of oiling to soften it but after that, they are wonderful. I grew up wearing Kolhapuri chappals, also handmade leather footwear. I refused to wear anything else. Nothing was as comfortable. I plan to try to make a pair soon. I have preserved my last pair carefully for precisely that reason - to get my size and the pattern. It will probably take me weeks.😄 About the glue, I wonder whether it is bone glue.
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Oh! Then it's understandable. Vey sad.
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That's too bad. I wonder why.
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The book has proved to be popular. He should be able to find a publisher. So many people looking for it.
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Oh. So there is no way it can get printed again? I wonder.
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I wonder why it went out of print. It is shown in Amazon as out of stock. It seems so popular and everyone wants it.
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I just saw another similar video with an intriguing little cup to hold some colorless liquid - it appears to be made entirely of... glue?
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I know. The glue in an open pot applied with fingers, the granite stone which is used to work on as well as to sharpen the single knife and a block of wood. I think of all the tools that I have and still not getting that result. Makes me feel so humble.
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Yes. Simple and beautiful. So much more difficult to achieve though! It is so nice to find ready made patterns. I had heard of music rolls but had no idea what they were. Thank you for enlightening me. 😃
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Found this the other day. Awed that there is no guide-line for sewing or anything else.
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Those are lovely and just what I was looking for. Thank you @Sheilajeanne 🙂 I have drawn a couple of flower designs and was wondering how to incorporate them into leatherwork. These designs provide the guidance that I need.
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I'll do that! Thank you for the tip.
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The tooling on the veg tanned leather and the distressed look of the chrome tanned are very different and give good contrast, in my opinion. The lighter parts of the distressed colors are the color of the veg tanned leather and the darker tooled areas on the leaves reflect the darker color of the chrome tanned leather, giving continuity between the two leathers.
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I like the contrast between the tooled and chrome tanned leathers - the colors as well as the textures. Very nice.
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Thank you for your reply. From close, it did not appear stamped. At least the sea did not. The ship, I wondered about that. But the sea is more interesting to me. How is surf like that tooled? I wonder whether one of those classes that Elk Track studios provides teaches something like that. I must check.
