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I am always preaching small scale batchwork for beginners. Why do I push this topic so much? Because, I spent 2 years off and on stumbling along wasting time and materials. I would want to make this or that. I would start it, mess up, forget a crucial step, or just do an all around unsatisfactory job. I would get frustrated and put it to the side. Then I wouldn't do anything for weeks or months. It was discouraging. Then I would start another one off project and the same thing would happen. It was like a broken record. Then one day @NVLeatherWorx saved my hobby. In one of the threads he mentioned make one thing. Over and over and over, until it's perfect. Then make something else, over and over, until it is also perfect. Thank God he said that. I'm not sure if he actually said the term batchwork at that time, but I had seen it here before. I started out with a single crappy Tandy shoulder and cut it all up into bracelet straps. Taking several of them thru all the steps together. I didn't complete all of them, but as I messed up one little strap, I put it to the side for testing the next step, and kept going forward with the others. You gain a lot of experience with batchwork. Instead of burnishing one thing for 10 minutes, you have hours and hours to develop your technique. The same is true of every step in the process. If you did one bracelet you would have one snap, maybe 5 decorative rivets or six inches of stamping, etc. ect. etc. But if you do a twelve pack of bracelets you just cranked up your hobby experience by a factor of 12. This gives you enough time to tweak on your technique. And it gives you more time with each step in the process. Driving the experience home in muscle memory and literal memory. So, as many here know my hobby room has been turned upside down for months. And I am finally getting ready to get back into my hobby at a new level. I started with a plan for a better use for my space. Over the months that grew into more tooling to make room for and, well it has been a minute since I have made much of anything. Well my brother wanted a new money clip, or rather a "notefold". Billfold has been taken for awhile. I, nor he came up with this concept. He found one and asked if I could make it. It is simple and can be made from scraps. I made a pattern. A proof, and then a prototype that proved to be a little thick. Then I made a batch of four to get his one. The batch is 1–2oz horween horsefront from Maverick. I really like the look of this stuff. Here is the proof out of 3 oz Tandy, the 5 oz cxl horsebutt prototype that was too thick, and the beginning of the batchwork. I love to have a Knipshield knife in the frame when I can. Doing for at a time I made each cut on each sequential piece. This helped with the muscle memory and sped up the process not unlike an assembly line. (More in the next post).