Pelallito Report post Posted February 18, 2010 Hello, I am new to leather work and wondered how the blazes you get a good finish on the belts edge and the belt itself? I started following Hidepounders tutorial and had a great edge on the belt. I started to dye the edges and had second thoughts about the order of operations. I antiqued the belt since I had basketweave it a few days ago. Then I tried to put brown dye on the edge and I did not get a nice straight edge on the belt. When ever I tried to hold it still, it wiggled away from me as if it had its own free will. I got ticked off and decided to attempt finishing it tomorrow. When I started putting the dye I used a Q tip, which went pretty slow. Then I tried using a swab and the dye went everywhere. I ended up cleaning it off. Any and all advice would be happily accepted. Thanks, Regards, Fred Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
terrahyd Report post Posted February 18, 2010 click gallery on tool bar; click tutorials and you will find a lot of answers... Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Pelallito Report post Posted February 19, 2010 (edited) Terrahyd, I did do a search for belts before I posted the question and did not find anything that helped. I will try your recommendation and check out the tutorials again.( Thanks again for the help, I did not know about the gallery and what is there!) Today I made an experimental version of the hidepounder pen for coloring the edge and it worked fairly well, but it could not fix the mistakes I made yesterday. I took a piece of stainless tubing and cut it off. I put a delrin plug into it to that I drove in a little bit. Then I had a small piece of felt that I put in the tube. I did not want my felt to disappear from sight. I cleared off more of my workbench so that I could over lap the belt over the edge of my workbench the entire length of the belt. That worked out pretty well. Thanks for the respose and help. Regards, Fred click gallery on tool bar; click tutorials and you will find a lot of answers... Edited February 19, 2010 by Pelallito Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ABC3 Report post Posted February 25, 2010 Terrahyd, I did do a search for belts before I posted the question and did not find anything that helped. I will try your recommendation and check out the tutorials again.( Thanks again for the help, I did not know about the gallery and what is there!) Today I made an experimental version of the hidepounder pen for coloring the edge and it worked fairly well, but it could not fix the mistakes I made yesterday. I took a piece of stainless tubing and cut it off. I put a delrin plug into it to that I drove in a little bit. Then I had a small piece of felt that I put in the tube. I did not want my felt to disappear from sight. I cleared off more of my workbench so that I could over lap the belt over the edge of my workbench the entire length of the belt. That worked out pretty well. Thanks for the respose and help. Regards, Fred Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Leatherimages Report post Posted February 25, 2010 Lots of different ways to do a belt edge. Lately tho, I prefer to use a dauber with the fuzz burned off. (Yes, it does stink). I use them for dye as well as edge paint. It works well with "the eye" (when it's on). Stand the belt on it's edge in a gentle curve. And work with care and balance. Letting your eye lead the dauber by 1/3" or so, helps to keep your attention where it needs to be so your hand doesn't "spaz" on you (mine does that sometimes). I whole heartedly recommend training eye/hand coordination. Patience helps. Working under pressure helps. Some use painters tape to mask the back. In either case, wring the dye out on a paper towel before you apply. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Pelallito Report post Posted March 1, 2010 ABC3, Thanks for the reply. Leatherimages, Thanks for the good ideas and help. I had not thought of putting the belt that way. I will also try the singed daubers. I will try that on my next belt. Regards, Fred Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites