Members olliesrevenge Posted February 22, 2010 Members Report Posted February 22, 2010 I have been meaning to get this done for quite some time now. I have Particle to thank for posting his video and getting me motivated to finish this. Now that I have actually completed one I feel like the rest will come much easier. Those who know holsters will recognize this as an attempt to clone a Tucker HF1. I had 2 previous attempts at creating a holster but stopped short of completion because of serious design errors that would have rendered them unusable. This forum rocks, and I couldn't have made this without this site. For what it's worth, here is my scoop on how I did mine. Using the techniques described in mattsh's holster design post to create a pattern and build a test model out of cardboard, I came up with a pattern. Using a french curve in the initial drawing helped the lines flow more nicely than I could have done by hand alone. I then traced the pattern out on vellum paper, cut it out, then transferred it to a $15 piece of 8-9 oz leather from the scrap bin at Tandy. Since I made this holster from 8-9oz leather lined with 8-9 oz leather from the same piece, I started with 4 pieces cut slightly too large, then cut them to the final shape after gluing them together into a single laminate. Using a tip from the guy at my local Tandy shop, I made sure to glue up the 2 pieces of the main body of the holster while it was in the folded position. Had I glued it up while flat the lining piece would have scrunched up when I tried to fold it. Question: Had I done something more reasonable like line 6-7oz leather with 4-5oz leather, would I still have to glue it up in the folded position?Finished & burnished (with saddle soap and a chunk of canvas) the single thickness edges of the flap piece then glued it to the main body of the holster. Stitch grooved the flap piece. Dyed the whole thing black with some Fiebings pro oil dye soaked into a piece of wool. Ran 5 dpi stitch wheel into stitch groove then drilled the stitch holes w/ dremel tool & 1/16" bit Hand stitched the front flap onto the main body & edge stitched the flap piece all w/ one piece of pre waxed thread. Glued main body in folded position Stitch grooved the rear belt loop area, the re-dyed the groove, then stitch wheeled it, then drilled it out, then hand stitched it. Drum sanded all the multi-layer thickness edge areas w/ Dremel & drum sander bit, then re-dyed the sanded down areas, then burnished the edges. Cut belt loops w/ Dewalt cordless drill & 5/16" drill bit, and 1 1/2" chisel. Totally messed up the front loop and had to use Dremel tool w/ small drum sander bit to correct the disaster I created with the chisel. After the hard lessons learned on the front loop, rear loop went much better & required no Dremel sanding damage control. Re-dyed & burnished belt loops. Dunked the whole thing in warm water for about a minute, let it set for about 10 minutes, inserted gun, then made a futile attempt to "bone in" two layers of 8-9oz leather. Next time I'll spend the money for some real leather of the appropriate size and maybe it will turn out better. Belted it in around a 5 gal bucket and left it near a wall heater to dry. The forward rake is too much for my taste but this thing actually carries a G19 pretty nicely. Comments - suggestions welcome. Lance Quote
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