Jump to content
toxo

Waxing thread.

Recommended Posts

I couldn't find my roll of wire and before I robbed this I thought it might be worth something to someone. I needed a particular colour and it wasn't waxed so I threw this together. Wasn't 100% but that was probably down to the wax. Got me out of a bind and taught me to buy waxed threads.

wire_in_can[1].jpg

wire[1].jpg

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

What's that saying about necessity being the mother of invention .........  

My  saying is  " in a bind ,use your mind "  :spoton:

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

LOL!  I've been sewing a lot with artificial sinew lately, and the stuff is a total PITA with the way it tends to split apart. My solution was to buy the cheapest possible beeswax candle at a local craft show the other day! Buying bulk beeswax was just too expensive, as it was always in the quantities you'd need for making candles, not waxing a couple of feet of thread!  I find just running the candle along the length of the thread is good enough for waxing it.

 

Edited by Sheilajeanne

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I just pull unwaxed thread through a chunk of beeswax a couple or three times and, presto, waxed thread, nothing needed except both of my hands. I just started another holster and will be using this method again in a few days as I am out of pre=waxed thread..

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
5 hours ago, doubleh said:

I just pull unwaxed thread through a chunk of beeswax a couple or three times and, presto, waxed thread, nothing needed except both of my hands. I just started another holster and will be using this method again in a few days as I am out of pre=waxed thread..

:17: And then I burnish the waxed thread with a piece of brown paper bag.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

My leather shop sells little blocks of beeswax for waxing threads and burnishing edges. Costs a few Euros and lasts a long time. Works mucg better in summer, though.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I use half bees wax and half brewers pitch mix it by hand in a small ball and that's it small amount last a long time.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
On 12/5/2022 at 5:59 PM, tsunkasapa said:

:17: And then I burnish the waxed thread with a piece of brown paper bag.

Good tip, @tsunkasapa.  Been using my fingers but this sounds better.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I just hold my thumb on the thread as it comes out of the bee's wax. It seems to work well but gets a little warm if you are pulling a long piece of string or pull too fast.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I too just pull the thread through a small block of wax. The wax came from own bees who gave a more sticky type of wax than is normally found in the hardware stores or from leather supply shops

After pulling through the wax block I pull the thread through my finger - thumb grip to even out the applied wax

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
On 12/5/2022 at 1:26 PM, Sheilajeanne said:

LOL!  I've been sewing a lot with artificial sinew lately, and the stuff is a total PITA with the way it tends to split apart. My solution was to buy the cheapest possible beeswax candle at a local craft show the other day! Buying bulk beeswax was just too expensive, as it was always in the quantities you'd need for making candles, not waxing a couple of feet of thread!  I find just running the candle along the length of the thread is good enough for waxing it.

 

Came here to find out whether other people had the same problem or it was just me.

Once upon a time, Tandy's artificial sinew was wonderful stuff. (Think 90s). I finally ran out, or low enough to want more, and got some a couple of years ago. The color is different. The stickiness is non-existent. I can't seem to stitch long before it starts falling apart. Trying to roll it back together, no matter how clean I wash my hands makes it dingy. If I manage to get something stitched without all these problems, it turns dingy or black just from exposure to the elements at shows in no time. (Yet it doesn't take a consistent dye to cover this).

I have a little of the good stuff left for special projects. It's just one more thing they have managed to completely ruin over the last decade or so, as far as I can tell.

Does anyone have any success stories, tips, or recommendation for a new supplier?

I couldn't find my beeswax today, so tried paraffin. It marginally helped with the unraveling, did nothing for discoloration.

Thanks, @Sheilajeanne for reminding me I could get just one candle at a show.

Thanks in advance to anyone with recommendations.

Edited by Ard Righ Art
Typo

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
1 hour ago, Ard Righ Art said:

Does anyone have any success stories, tips, or recommendation for a new supplier?

Not sure of a proper definition of artificial sinew, but Maine Thread Co sells twisted, waxed polyester cords that I believe they refer to as artificial sinew.  I use these heavy cords for some saddle repairs.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
2 hours ago, Ard Righ Art said:

Does anyone have any success stories, tips, or recommendation for a new supplier?

I couldn't find my beeswax today, so tried paraffin. It marginally helped with the unraveling, did nothing for discoloration.

Thanks, @Sheilajeanne for reminding me I could get just one candle at a show.

Thanks in advance to anyone with recommendations.

Ard Righ, if I ever run out of the large-ish roll of sinew I bought from Tandy, I'm going to give Tribal Spirit a try: https://tribalspiritmusic.com/artists/supplies/needles-and-sinew/  Since native people were the first North Americans to sew with sinew, I'm hoping they know where to find the good stuff now that it's made out of polyester! Most shops only sell large spools of sinew, but Tribal Spirit has the natural colour available in a 65 ft. roll, so I won't feel bad about getting rid of it if it doesn't work as well as I think it should!

Edited by Sheilajeanne

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
8 hours ago, Sheilajeanne said:

Ard Righ, if I ever run out of the large-ish roll of sinew I bought from Tandy, I'm going to give Tribal Spirit a try: https://tribalspiritmusic.com/artists/supplies/needles-and-sinew/  Since native people were the first North Americans to sew with sinew, I'm hoping they know where to find the good stuff now that it's made out of polyester! Most shops only sell large spools of sinew, but Tribal Spirit has the natural colour available in a 65 ft. roll, so I won't feel bad about getting rid of it if it doesn't work as well as I think it should!

it looks the same to me but.... All races have sewn with sinew just at different times in history and i doubt 21st century native Americans have the experience their ancestors did or a secret place they buy the stuff for resale lol but i get what your saying.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Tribal Spirit offers a discount to people with native status, and I'm sure native craftspeople use a lot more artificial sinew than your average leatherworker. They obviously won't want to disappoint their customers, so will stock good stuff, not crap.

I have a few other reasons for using them - they're Canadian, so no cross-border shipping. Also, I've dealt with them to buy moose and deer hides, and they've been fantastic - both the speed of shipping and the quality of the leather. So, I'm hoping I'll have the same experience with the artificial sinew. 

Third - it's hard to find a small roll of ANY type of thread!  :rolleyes2:

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Thank you all for chiming in.

I think I'll give Maine Thread a try since I didn't gather anyone had used the "sinew" products of anyone other than Tandy yet. They did come in big rolls that last a long time, if you aren't making dreamcatchers or the like I reckon.

I have a fair bit of waxed poly in black and brown, but they seem to have some colours that look like they would go well with some of my stains and dyes.  Plus I'm always looking to find new suppliers of quality stuff.

I am thinking too of getting some real sinew to play with, along with a little bit of the artificial from one of the Native companies I found after your @Sheilajeanne recommendation. I'm not sure about cross border shipping of genuine, so I'll have to figure in cost and customs headaches on that. 

It's not really a priority for anything I have planned just now, but there are times when it is just the look I want, however. Curiosity may make me try it next free moment when I have the room in the budget.

Isuppose I could try to harvest a critter myself. It's been a very long time. Last time I tried that my large canine couldn't resist that framed up hide. I just barely resisted stretching him out on it, as he actually about outweighed the buck...

If anyone does find a better artificial sinew than what is currently being offered by my favourite place to gripe about, please share. I'll do the same, and report back what I find on a new thread (I'll be here all week...) 

 

 

 

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

i did a short search yesterday and only found one manufacturer of artificial sinew. They are in the US, my guess is most re-sellers even the native Americans in Canada sell the same stuff made by the same company.

Artificial sinew is made to be pulled apart and used just as the real sinew was also pulled apart for different sizes of thread so getting sinew that doesn't have that property is going to be hard. 

Native American used real sinew for everything from  backing on bows, cordage, to sewing baby mocs as well so it was separated to the size as needed for the particular project. artificial sinew is also made so it can be separated. 

 

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I've wondered just how many sources there are for the artificial. If it's like most things these days a couple at best. I looked at the native suppliers not for the artificial, but to see cost of getting actual sinew, so I can compare or use it on special projects.

I get that sinew is supposed to separate. But it seems that the manufacturers have struck upon that sole property, forgetting others like sticking back to itself. 

I wish I had taken this picture earlier. When I pulled the end off the old roll, I wasn't even sure it would come. By the time I got it free it looked like it had been chewed up to a finely frayed fibrous pulp. Unfortunately, I rolled it back together, then refrayed it for this picture.

The new stock separates into three main strands, which further separate into smaller ones, but re-adhesion is non-existent. Needles shred it. With waxing and a long enough lead I can get away with short stitching runs, but I think it may be relegated to the give to kids for throwaway projects pile. It was a bit steep for that.

 

 

 

old_v_new.jpg

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
11 minutes ago, Ard Righ Art said:

I've wondered just how many sources there are for the artificial. If it's like most things these days a couple at best. I looked at the native suppliers not for the artificial, but to see cost of getting actual sinew, so I can compare or use it on special projects.

I get that sinew is supposed to separate. But it seems that the manufacturers have struck upon that sole property, forgetting others like sticking back to itself. 

I wish I had taken this picture earlier. When I pulled the end off the old roll, I wasn't even sure it would come. By the time I got it free it looked like it had been chewed up to a finely frayed fibrous pulp. Unfortunately, I rolled it back together, then refrayed it for this picture.

The new stock separates into three main strands, which further separate into smaller ones, but re-adhesion is non-existent. Needles shred it. With waxing and a long enough lead I can get away with short stitching runs, but I think it may be relegated to the give to kids for throwaway projects pile. It was a bit steep for that.

 

 

 

old_v_new.jpg

interesting! I'm going to have to check some of the new stuff out i guess. I don't use it much anymore.  I have some real stuff i collect during hunting season if i need it. 

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Not much help, but I got some artificial sinew from Le Prevo. I've not used it yet and I don't know where it is made

Scroll down about 2/3 of the page

http://www.leprevo.co.uk/threads.htm

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I seldom use it myself. Pretty sure that roll on the right is from the late 90s. I bought the new roll hoping to save the best for my best work (like I saved old antique stain for the colour, though the new Tandy gel has marvelous properties, and old super-shene for resisting as long as I could make it last). 

I think I will learn how to collect my own. It's definitely a skill set I need to round out my abilities and life skills just in case. Not to mention the justification for the extra zero (not really, but one can dream) you get to make when you advertise that certain products have handmade dyes, stains, finishes, etc...

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
5 minutes ago, Ard Righ Art said:

I seldom use it myself. Pretty sure that roll on the right is from the late 90s. I bought the new roll hoping to save the best for my best work (like I saved old antique stain for the colour, though the new Tandy gel has marvelous properties, and old super-shene for resisting as long as I could make it last). 

I think I will learn how to collect my own. It's definitely a skill set I need to round out my abilities and life skills just in case. Not to mention the justification for the extra zero (not really, but one can dream) you get to make when you advertise that certain products have handmade dyes, stains, finishes, etc...

maybe if you have any small meat processing plants or wild game processors businesses, or friends that hunt, in your area they may be able to help you out. the biggest pieces are along the back and usually trimmed out. 

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

No lack of either of those around here (or overpopulated critters), and I need to begin hunting again myself. Season's not that far off. Though I've never lacked for offers of hides, learning the finer points of using as much of the animal as possible might be a new skillset for those I know. Might as well try to pick it up myself. New assignment for the year :-)

I'll start researching now. You may hear from me if I have questions about the process later.

Sorry OP for the thread hijack!

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.


×
×
  • Create New...