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Posted

I'm using chipboard for making hardcover books.

What I'm using is about 1.8mm but it comes in various thicknesses and sizes. Its a good stiffness and doesn't lift up as I'm trying to mark the leather.

I draw a pattern on a piece of paper then use an Elmers glue stick to attach it to the chipboard.

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Posted

T-shirt cardboard, but it’s not something you can stock up on. I went to hobby lobby and purchased the large poster board pad they had. I like cereal boxes but  I have also used paper and duct tape to make a few patterns

Doc Reaper

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Posted

Manilla folders, cereal boxes, whatever I can find that's free.:) It all works,

Machines wot I have - Singer 51W59; Singer 331K4; Seiko STH-8BLD; Pfaff 335; CB4500.

Chinese shoe patcher; Singer 201K (old hand crank)

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Posted
7 hours ago, Doc Reaper said:

T-shirt cardboard, but it’s not something you can stock up on. I went to hobby lobby and purchased the large poster board pad they had. I like cereal boxes but  I have also used paper and duct tape to make a few patterns

I use poster board as well.  Another Thing I use is craft foam.  Not to make a template, but it makes a good analog for leather to prototype gun holsters, mag holsters, ammo pouches, or whatever else.

Regards,

Littlef

Littlef - YouTube

  • 1 year later...
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Posted

I use TRACING PAPER first. its cheap and easy to cut, and best it lets you see all levels of the potential pattern.

after you have it JUST RIGHT  then I transfer it to chip board or another stiff (not thick) cardboard.  This technique has served me well for years making one-off items. Best part is both materials are cheap and come in LARGE sizes or rolls.

 

Be EXCELLENT to each other.

_ Bill n Ted _

  • 2 weeks later...
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Posted
On 2/11/2023 at 10:19 AM, Gosut said:

Made templates this morning for belt ends and another checkbook cover pattern. My first attempt was to draw it directly on the back of poster board, then cut out. That project design proved unworkable, so never used it. These I first drew in LibreCAD, then printed. But how to make templates?

First idea, one I intended to use for a knife sheath pattern, was to trace it on the poster board using carbon paper. Then decided to cut around the pattern, glue it to the back of the poster board with a rub-on glue stick, then cut out.

This worked well. I went with oval belt holes, and the first two are passable, but the rest look good. I used a hole punch (3mm) for the rounded ends and cut between them. Used the same method on the belt buckle slot, except bumped it up to a 5mm punch. Worried about the half-circle end of the buckle end and the English point on the other, but went at it slowly with an small craft knife that was a gift some years ago. Also used the craft knife for the belt holes and buckle slot. The rest I used a utility knife. Used the craft knife for the rounded corners of the checkbook cover.

Being a newbie, I looked at cutting out the template as practice for cutting the leather later.

Is this a standard way of making templates? If I was going to do a lot of belts and checkbook covers, I might have sprung for that plastic film used to make templates, Being this would see little use, thought poster board would be okay.

NO PICTURES IT DIDN'T HAPPEN:o

  • 2 months later...
Posted

I invested in a 10W diode laser and mounted a camera on it as well. I use this to copy, create and cut out patterns directly onto poster board. Sometimes I'll cut leather directly but this requires good ventilation and/or extraction of the fumes.

Leather work machines I own: Thor 1341, Thor 441, LSZ-1 clone, 801 bell skiver,  Tinker's Delight Shoe Patcher. (Tippmann Boss was re-homed.)

Stamp - Sig (Custom).jpg

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Posted

At 79 yrs . . . I have always despised trying to make two things exactly alike by using templates and / or patterns.

I like them similar . . . but still unique and "one of a kind".

My leather work is the same.

I use manila file folders to make "sort of" patterns . . . they get me to be where I can cut a piece of leather . . . and know it will fit a 1911 . . . a Ruger Vaquero . . . or a double barreled derringer.

I then wet mold the weapon . . . let it dry . . . and complete the project from there.

Each holster will fit the intended weapon or any just like it . . . but laid side by side . . . one may be a tad longer . . . one may be a tad wider . . . one may have double stitching on the outside . . . one may have a thick welt VS thin welt.

Just how I do it . . . but again . . . common ol' manila folders and a razor knife have always done well by me  . . .  get that "sort of" pattern out . . . outline it with a ball point pen . . . go to cutting and I'm good.

May God bless,

Dwight

If you can breathe, . . . thank God.

If you can read, . . . thank a teacher.

If you are reading this in English, . . . thank a veteran.

www.dwightsgunleather.com

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