Members Old Navy Posted November 20, 2009 Members Report Posted November 20, 2009 I am having trouble cutting thick leather.Could someone tell me what they use?Thanks,Navy Quote
Contributing Member TwinOaks Posted November 20, 2009 Contributing Member Report Posted November 20, 2009 It really depends on what kind of cut you're trying to make. If you're trying to cut out a particular, repeatable pattern...i.e. holster pieces, then a clicker (basically a cookie cutter) is the way to go. If it's just general cutting, well, a head knife or round knife is the answer. Head/round knives (and even rein knives for those familiar with them) have a curved blade which gives a really long cutting edge that makes cutting thick leather easier. The trick is to have whatever blade you use INCREDIBLY SHARP. Razor sharp is just a good start. There's a few threads on sharpening blades, and I'm pretty sure every one of them mention stropping. You should give a blade a quick stropping before cutting, and at any time the leather 'grabs' at the blade. Learn to use a head knife and you'll likely stick with it. Even if you're using a plain ol' razor knife, exacto type blade, or an 'olfa' knife, strop, strop, strop. You'll be amazed at how dull "razor" sharp is. Quote Mike DeLoach Esse Quam Videri (Be rather than Seem) "Don't learn the tricks of the trade.....Learn the trade." "Teach what you know......Learn what you don't." LEATHER ARTISAN'S DIGITAL GUILD on Facebook.
Members Leerwerker Posted November 20, 2009 Members Report Posted November 20, 2009 Ask you local Tandy store manager to demo the new Damascus blades for you - they come pre-sharpened - super sharp! they really are the tool for the leathercrafter who already had everything (before these came on the scene....) Quote JOhan ------------------------------------------- ****Afrikaans: Leerwerker ***** ****Zulu: lesikhumba isisebenzi Latvian: ādas darba ņēmējs *****Russian: кожа работника ****English: Leatherworker ****Dutch: Lederbewerker ****Flemish: Leerbewerker ****Hebrew: עור פועל ****German: Leder Handwerker ****Hungarian: Bőrdíszműves ****Turkish: deri işçisi ****French: Artisan du Cuir ****Spanish: Artesano de Cuero ****Norwegian: Skinn kunstners ****Swedish: Läderhantverkare ****Greek: δερμάτινα εργαζόμενος Sotho: mosebeletsi oa letlalo
Members Colter Posted November 20, 2009 Members Report Posted November 20, 2009 (edited) i usually lay my pattern(a Gun Holster/Knife pouch that sort) on the fleshy/rough side of the leather, make the outline, use a spray bottle to soak the lines i need to cut out, Then use a Box cutter Knife(Those that retract/change blades), and use a fresh Blade at the start. Works very well for me. Edited November 20, 2009 by Thalaskaru Quote
hidepounder Posted November 20, 2009 Report Posted November 20, 2009 I use a head knife to cut 99% of everything I do. It is also what I use to skive everything I do so in my opinion it is the ultimate leather cutting tool. There is definitely a learning curve related to using and sharpening, however. Hope this helps... Bobby Quote
Members Old Navy Posted November 21, 2009 Author Members Report Posted November 21, 2009 Thanks Ladies and Gents.I will use all of the sugestions.I ordered a headknife yesterday from Sheffields of england.I didnt get stainless,but it should be ok.I got a osborn leather cutter from e bay.Can I sharpen the blade on it?I wanted a pricker,but they are priced to high.Does anyone know of a supplier for one at a lower cost?navy Quote
Members jbird Posted November 21, 2009 Members Report Posted November 21, 2009 skiver round knife as I call it, but its really more than one tool its more you must learn too sharpen thats the key to success. Quote Josh Dusty Chaps Leather & Seven O Saddle Shop 801-809-8456 Keep moving forward! On a horse. Hebrews 4:12 My link
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.