Members Spence Posted September 28, 2009 Members Report Posted September 28, 2009 Okay, I've done the search thing and haven't been able to find what I really need to know. I'm getting ready to clean up this hovel I call a shop and that means I'll be tossing a huge amount of scrap leather, mostly skived and beveled lace remnants and slivers of leather. Before I toss it, is this what I need to make up some leather putty? If so, is there anything I need to do to chop it up into dust? What is "Leather Dust" ? Thanks Quote Spence Mendoza, TX, USA
Contributing Member barra Posted September 28, 2009 Contributing Member Report Posted September 28, 2009 Okay, I've done the search thing and haven't been able to find what I really need to know. I'm getting ready to clean up this hovel I call a shop and that means I'll be tossing a huge amount of scrap leather, mostly skived and beveled lace remnants and slivers of leather. Before I toss it, is this what I need to make up some leather putty? If so, is there anything I need to do to chop it up into dust? What is "Leather Dust" ? Thanks Here's what I do. I save all my bits of skiving scraps and edging slivers in an old coffee can. When I have enough I put some into an old electric coffee grinder. When all ground up save the dust in another container for future use. When I want some I only mix up enough for use by adding a small amount onto a scrap of heavy cardboard. Make a well in the pile of dust and add PVA glue. I then mix it well together adding small amounts of PVA until I get the consistency I want (fairly thick). Barra Quote "If You're not behind the Troops, please feel free to stand in front of them"
Members Spence Posted September 28, 2009 Author Members Report Posted September 28, 2009 Thank you, Barra. Just what I needed to know. I'll have enough leather dust to supply generations. Quote Spence Mendoza, TX, USA
Members Spence Posted October 5, 2009 Author Members Report Posted October 5, 2009 (edited) Okay. I bought an electric coffee grinder. Very common item, pretty much the same, regardless of the brand. I put my slivers and bits in there and all it did was wrap around the blades. A minimal amount of dust and the motor jammed. Just in case, I put small, medium and large amounts into the thing. Same result. Any other ideas? Do they sell leather dust anywhere? Edited October 5, 2009 by Spence Quote Spence Mendoza, TX, USA
Members whinewine Posted October 5, 2009 Members Report Posted October 5, 2009 (edited) Okay. I bought an electric coffee grinder. Very common item, pretty much the same, regardless of the brand. I put my slivers and bits in there and all it did was wrap around the blades. A minimal amount of dust and the motor jammed. Just in case, I put small, medium and large amounts into the thing. Same result. Any other ideas? Do they sell leather dust anywhere? I know you're trying to make dust from your leather scraps, but... if you need dust to use as filler, use sawdust instead. That's what I was taught years ago & it's all that I use & it's a lot more inexpensive ($0.00 per pound). Or, do like Rawhide does, use up the scraps to make handles for scalples (sp?). He's got a post somewhere on how to do it. All you need is scraps, not dust. russ Edited October 5, 2009 by whinewine Quote
Members Spence Posted October 5, 2009 Author Members Report Posted October 5, 2009 Thanks Russ. I guess that's what I'm gonna have to do. As luck? would have it, I own a radial arm saw and that monster is an expert at manufacturing sawdust. And thanks for the idea about wrapping the scalpels. I probably have some lengths that would work for that. Although I've been making some pretty small flattened turksheads with that stuff too.(for appliques) Quote Spence Mendoza, TX, USA
Members whinewine Posted October 5, 2009 Members Report Posted October 5, 2009 (edited) Spence: I'm sorry, I made a mistake- the post: Just for fun, Leather mache (under fabrication: leather tools), was made by Panther, not Rawhide (although that's how I found the original post- through his posts). I stand corrected. russ Edited October 5, 2009 by whinewine Quote
Members joet Posted October 5, 2009 Members Report Posted October 5, 2009 Okay, I've done the search thing and haven't been able to find what I really need to know. I'm getting ready to clean up this hovel I call a shop and that means I'll be tossing a huge amount of scrap leather, mostly skived and beveled lace remnants and slivers of leather. Before I toss it, is this what I need to make up some leather putty? If so, is there anything I need to do to chop it up into dust? What is "Leather Dust" ? Thanks You have been given some excellant advice, and I don't want to duplicate any of it, but you might try using a blender (not your wife's) and see how that would work. Hide Crafters in Texas sells bags of leather dust just for their Robb Barr patterns. Quote
Contributing Member ClayB Posted October 5, 2009 Contributing Member Report Posted October 5, 2009 I tried an electric coffee grinder once, took the blades right off of it. Tried a blender too and that didn't work much better. For me, it's easier to just buy the stuff. I've heard that some shoe repair places sweep up piles of leather dust when they sand soles and things. You might be able to get it from a place like that. I don't know how clean it would be. If you're just using it on the backs of projects to fill in the embossing, it might not matter how fine it is, or how clean. If you are going to use it on the front of projects to fill in areas of an embossed carving, then you'd want it as fine and clean as you can get it. The stuff from Hide Crafter is good stuff. Leather dust mixed with rubber cement also stays a little bit flexible after it dries so you can still shape the muscles etc. on a carved project.I think that's why Robb and Jan went to it instead of saw dust. Quote ClayB Badlands Leather Art blog Badlands Leather Art Website
Members CitizenKate Posted October 6, 2009 Members Report Posted October 6, 2009 To me, the larger issue is finding a use for my leather crumbs. I used to have a large pile of fairly large leather pieces leftover from my game boards that I had to find uses for. I have expanded my product line to include smaller and smaller items in order to convert the remnants into some income. But now I've got a couple of bins full of pieces that are so small or skinny that there really is nothing else I could make with them, which is why I call them crumbs. If I could find a good way to grind them up, then I would be able turn 100% of the leather I buy into something I can sell. Kate Quote
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