Moderator Johanna Posted February 15, 2008 Moderator Report Posted February 15, 2008 Let's have a thread about saving money in the leather working shop. There are lots of ways to recycle and/or substitute- what are your favorites? Post the obvious and the obscure. *The heavy Kraft paper the leather order came wrapped in works great for pattern templates. *Coffee stains bone findings and beads for that "authentic" look. Whatcha got? Quote You cannot depend on your eyes when your imagination is out of focus. - Mark Twain
electrathon Posted February 15, 2008 Report Posted February 15, 2008 I make a lot of knife sheaths. The cardboard from cerial/food boxes is great for a first template. Then transfer it to the leather once the size and shape is determined. Aaron Quote
Moderator bruce johnson Posted February 15, 2008 Moderator Report Posted February 15, 2008 Most all my cutting patterns are made from printer's press blankets. I get them from a local print shop across the alley. They are used on offset presses. One side is rubberized, and the backing is a durable cloth. The rubber side down doesn't slide around on the leather. Toss a bench anvil or shotbag on it and it stays put. They have enough body to run a knife right along the edge or not move with a tracing stylus. I can write things on a the cloth side with a Sharpie. I can ID what it is, what gusset and zipper length are needed, handle size, etc. I can rivet pieces together for longer things like back cinches. It sews on my machines. I have sewed up trial pieces and mailed it to guys as test patterns. I did a over the saddle horn cordless microphone holder for a mounted rodeo announcer, and it had to be just right. That made life easier. Mock up cell phone patterns are easier, too. They cut with knives or heavy scissors. I originally got the idea from Bill Gomer's video. He made saddle seat patterns from them. I make all my patterns from it. These are not cheap new, over $100 for some sizes I am told. When they start to wear out, they toss them. My guys clean them with solvent before they give them to me. Every so often I find a stack of them in the back of my truck at work. They also work for drawer and tool box liners. Quote Bruce Johnson Malachi 4:2 "the windshield's bigger than the mirror, somewhere west of Laramie" - Dave Stamey Vintage Refurbished And Selected New Leather Tools For Sale - www.brucejohnsonleather.com
Ambassador pete Posted February 15, 2008 Ambassador Report Posted February 15, 2008 1- keep all of the reducer after cleaning my brushes in a jar. I use it to clean off the marble from paint, glue, antique, etc. The reducer is grey to black by then but works well and leaves a clean slab with no residue. 2- I buy the $1.00 plastic 3 ring folders at a dollar store. I use the 3 rings for albums and use the front and back panels to glue the project to when tooling for stretch. I leave them on (glued) as the stiffener and simply trim and line over them. pete Quote
Members Tina Posted February 15, 2008 Members Report Posted February 15, 2008 I did a find this winter. In a garage sale i found this roll of blueprint paper, a yard wide and I don't know how many in the roll left...Manny more yards. The paper is coted with something (feels plastic) and very durable when tracking on leather, and the best, I only payed 50 cents for the whole roll:-) Quote "He who works with his hands is a laborer. He who works with his hands, and his head is a craftsman. He who works with his hands, and his head, and his heart, is An Artist" http://vildkorpens-laderlya.deviantart.com http://tupali.deviantart.com/
Billsotx Posted February 15, 2008 Report Posted February 15, 2008 (edited) I make a lot of knife sheaths. The cardboard from cerial/food boxes is great for a first template. Then transfer it to the leather once the size and shape is determined.Aaron I with Aaron on boxes and manila folders for patterns. If you mess one up and you will don't be so quick to toss, especially if you're half-way there. If you cut too much off or punch a whole in the wrong place tape it back and move on. When you get it right then redo you're working template. Masking tape, duct tape and carton tape are always close at hand. When I open glue or dye it over an old cereal box. I varnished over a huge blotch of USMC black right in the middle of my work bench, left as a reminder - Don't dye stuff without covering me up. ... Luckily the varnish worked because rub-off was endless. I could have easily replaced the top of the bench, but I need reminders. ... Eat cereal! We need more boxes! ... lol! Good thread here Johanna! Edited February 15, 2008 by Billsotx Quote
Moderator bruce johnson Posted February 15, 2008 Moderator Report Posted February 15, 2008 I don't much use Xray film to glue to in an effort to prevent stretch while tooling. I do use it a fair amount for stiffeners for some things. It works well to sandwich between a soft out layer and liner for things like business card cases and checkbooks. Adds stiffness without bulk. Just rough up both sides with coarse sandpaper and cement in place. I mostly use this for exotics without much body or chap leather. Warning - I told one guy about this and he used it in the entire piece. You just want to it to stiffen the sides. Use patches on both sides and leave the fold area open. Otherwise it won't fold. For some padded or plugged inlays, I use it as a backer. Cement the padding and the inlay leather down to the Xray film. Secure it with binder clips, tape, whatever and sew around the inlay. Then I trim the excess film off the back, and then glue in a liner and edge stitch the liner in place. It makes a cleaner look inside than stitching the inlay in place through the liner. Quote Bruce Johnson Malachi 4:2 "the windshield's bigger than the mirror, somewhere west of Laramie" - Dave Stamey Vintage Refurbished And Selected New Leather Tools For Sale - www.brucejohnsonleather.com
Drac Posted February 15, 2008 Report Posted February 15, 2008 1. free boxes and envelopes through the usps website. 2. at comic shops on wednesday (shipment day) you can get larger boxes and packing material for free. some of the boxes are good to use for shipping, some are good for storage. also the dividers/protectors are fairly heavyweight can be used for templates that don't need to be folded. 3. need wood for something? hit up construction sites. they'll usually give you very usable scrap wood. I've got a lap table that also had my mini anvil mounted on it that was made from scrap wood. 4. keep all your scrap pieces of leather. sit down one day when you're tired of making your usual stuff, dig through and use your imagination to come up with something new. some of the stuff I've come up with just to use up scrap leather have been me biggest sellers and got added to the usual assortment. 5. find alternative places to get some things. places like harbor freight, the dollar store, etc. as an example I needed a new poly punch board. dollar store time! look in the kitchen area for 'em. the kitchen cutting board is the same material and loads cheaper and a bit more surface area. plus it has a handle so I can hang it up. 6. keep an eye out for places going out of business and think if they might have something you can use. mannequins, fixtures, or whatever can be gotten cheap sometimes. if it's an office place going out of business or closing up, file cabinets, folders, binders, lamps and other stuff can sometimes be... oh, what's that magic word? oh yeah! free! 7. (this one's showing my old punker roots) go dumpster diving on college campuses at christmas time and end of semester when the kids move out of the dorms. chairs, desks, shelves, clothes, tv's, vcr's, dvd players, stereos and all kinds of stuff gets tossed out because they got a new one or they just don't want pack it out. 8. keep an eye out while driving. you neverknow what you'll see on the side of the road. my dad has a LARGE collection of zippos because of that, we've both gotten several tools that way (love that old craftsman warrantee), and I even found a bag of about 20 bootleg movies that way. tossed the crappy movies and kept the cases. 9. after-holiday sales at craft/fabric stores. as an example I got a full roll of stretch vinyl that's normally 9 bucks a yard for 80 cents a yard. you can get some pretty snazzy prints and materials cheaply that way. 10. ask around! sometimes it's amazing where somebody gets something. Quote frissenfrassenmussafrussen...
Hilly Posted February 15, 2008 Report Posted February 15, 2008 I've made lifters out of screwdrivers that my husband was going to throw away. I made a tool holder out of a scrap of wood and a bench press. Places that make stone counter tops can be a source for "marble" slabs to tool on. They usually give away the sink cut outs for free. My father in law was cleaning out his garage, and came across enough scrap wood (that he was going to toss) to make my stitching horse. Quote
Contributing Member barra Posted February 16, 2008 Contributing Member Report Posted February 16, 2008 (edited) Scrounge around at businesses that do shop fitting or kitchen makeovers. You can pick up their boo boo's and make great workshop benches/storage cabinets el cheapo laundry bar soap melted with a little animal fat (free from the butcher) and a table spoon of kerosene (to disuade vermin from the fat) makes excellent and almost free saddle soap. I'm with Drac on the cheap vinyl. This stuff is great for experimentation and testing out theories as prototypes before launching into the expensive leather Lurk around businesses that make sheepskin car seat covers for offcuts (sometimes free). You'll be surprised how big a peice they will throw out. TRY and have natural lighting and insulation to save power bills. I know this can be easier said than done. hunt around bargain bins in hardwares for tools you can apply to leatherwork frequent garage sales save old buckles and hardware in general from old tack etc for repairs on the next Scrooge Mc Horse owner's gear (as long as the buckle is safe and not rusted out. You can be up front and honest and tell them your going to use second hand buckles etc to save THEM money. Save old busted items you find or get on the cheap. Cut them up for patterns. As an example you find a crappy vinyl handbag at a garage sale or in the neibours trash. Fish it out. If it is a style you like, wipe out the thought in your mind that it is genuine imitation leather. You can cut it apart to see how it is constructed and use it as a pattern to make another out of nice leather. Keep all you shavings once you edge your strapping. Put them in a container and when it is full, feed it all into an WARNING OLD, I say again OLD coffee grinder to make leather dust. Disregard WARNING if you looking for the final excuse to tip Spouse over the edge. Shop at the 99 cent store. They put the same ingredients into most artsy fartsy leather preparations as they do the cheapo hand creams etc. Read the ingredients on your expensive leather preparations, then read the ingredients on cleaning products at the 99 cent store. Think outside the square before you throw stuff out. What leatherwork application can I turn this into. As an example I have an old coffee perculator I use the hotplate part to warm oils and waxes. Barra Edited February 16, 2008 by barra Quote "If You're not behind the Troops, please feel free to stand in front of them"
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