Members JohnnyDingus Posted June 12, 2009 Members Report Posted June 12, 2009 Ed, Your work is fantastic as always. You do quality work on your tools and are a man of his word. It is great that you do this for your fellow leatherworkers. vince Quote
BearMan Posted June 12, 2009 Author Report Posted June 12, 2009 Thanks Vince, I REALLY appreciate that!! I do what I can, after all,,, we're all in this together,,, right?? I would love to see leathercraft, leather art as a whole help all it's artisan get better,,, & better. Ed Ed, Your work is fantastic as always. You do quality work on your tools and are a man of his word. It is great that you do this for your fellow leatherworkers. vince Quote Ed the"BearMan" polarb1717@aol.com Beary: BearMauls@yahoo.com http://tinyurl.com/BearMauls "The Best tooling mauls available today!"
MADMAX22 Posted June 13, 2009 Report Posted June 13, 2009 Those are way cool. Thanks for posting this. Only bad thing about this is it makes me want to take up even more hobbies that I wont have time or money for Quote
Members manfrommuc Posted June 13, 2009 Members Report Posted June 13, 2009 Very Very nice and high quality work, now leathertooling must be run from alone !!!!!!!!!!!! greetings Johann Quote keep the rubberside down http://www.harleyluja.de
Contributing Member UKRay Posted June 13, 2009 Contributing Member Report Posted June 13, 2009 Beautiful things, Ed. I'd be frightened of damaging them! Ray Quote "Some mornings, it's just not worth chewing through the leather straps" Ray Hatley www.barefootleather.co.uk
Members phlegmaticdog Posted June 17, 2009 Members Report Posted June 17, 2009 Beautiful things, Ed. I'd be frightened of damaging them! Ray I agree with Ray. I'd want to keep them on display behind glass for fear of scratching them! Seriously though, these are truly beautiful. Dave M Quote
Members K-Man Posted June 17, 2009 Members Report Posted June 17, 2009 I picked these up the other day from the post office. They are exceptional - much better than some of the other mauls currently available in the marketplace. I got to use the larger one yesterday for a bit, and it was a welcome relief (in weight) from what I had previously been using. Thanks again, Ed. You did yourself good here. Quote
BearMan Posted June 17, 2009 Author Report Posted June 17, 2009 Thanks Kevin, I really apprecite all the compliments!! It's nice to make things,,, anything,, for people that really appreciate all the time & quality materials that go into them. Thanks again,,, Ed I picked these up the other day from the post office. They are exceptional - much better than some of the other mauls currently available in the marketplace. I got to use the larger one yesterday for a bit, and it was a welcome relief (in weight) from what I had previously been using. Thanks again, Ed. You did yourself good here. Quote Ed the"BearMan" polarb1717@aol.com Beary: BearMauls@yahoo.com http://tinyurl.com/BearMauls "The Best tooling mauls available today!"
Members Meleck Posted June 19, 2009 Members Report Posted June 19, 2009 Truly nice mallets. And the stand is great. As a woodturner myself, I love to do mallets. It's sorta my kicks these days. Where do you get your hardware. I can see the washers at the top and the bottom of the "vinyl" part but I'd be hard pressed to figure out what you used at the top and bottom of the actual mallet. And what do you use for the striking part and where do you get it? Thanks a lot. Even for just doing them as they are great inspiration pieces. Quote
Members Meleck Posted June 23, 2009 Members Report Posted June 23, 2009 Bearman, I got your PM and thanks a lot for the information. I would have sent a PM myself but your inbox is full. No wonder with work like that you probably do get a lot of emails. I agree that the acorn nut at the end doesn't look that great but it's probably easier to tighten. I looked for that integral captured nut and I couldn't find anything under that. The reference for the bolt size is worth a lot. It's great info. It would be interesting to see a maul before it's assembled. That would give me (and probably others) a lot of information on its fabrication. I love what you did to embellished up the washers and the bolt head. All that pounding is that little something that looks easy but isn't really and makes one hell of a difference. Again thanks a lot for the info. Now I have to gather the ingredients and set myself to work on the lathe. Quote
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