Tophee Report post Posted July 19 I was looking at some videos on patterns I am planning on trying to make. I noticed that some cut the pattern out of their leather while wet and some did not is there any benefit to cutting wet? I am not talking tooling or stamping or anything, just cutting the shapes you need out of your piece of peather for a pattern. I have been cutting my beginner projects out from dry leather but was curious on if I should be wetting the leather for an easier or cleaner cut? Also sorry if this was already a thread, I either am blind or not searching it correctly if it is. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Dwight Report post Posted July 19 In many cases . . . yes . . . it is easier to cut that way. It is also easier to stick your pattern with a thumbnail . . . scratch it with the knife . . . or smudge the devil out of a complicated cut. The above are the reasons I cut mine dry. May God bless, Dwight Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
fredk Report post Posted July 19 I've never considered it. I've always cut dry. I might damp/wet cutting Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
TomE Report post Posted July 19 (edited) Covering my bench with HDPE was a big help for cutting out projects. Menards has 4x8 x 1/4" sheets in a white color that brightens up my shop. @Northmount taught me that a Google search of this site using the syntax below is more efficient than using the internal search engine. Type in the Google search bar: site leatherworker.net <your search terms here> Edited July 19 by TomE Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Tophee Report post Posted July 21 I see, thank you all for your inputs. Ill give that search method a try next time I wanna check something. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Cattleman Report post Posted July 30 Wet leathet does indeed cut easier... However it is also easier to stretch and deform the leather while cutting it wet. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites