Members Ironwood Posted May 29, 2010 Members Report Posted May 29, 2010 I've been doing some leather working off and on for a couple of years now. This is my latest holster. Made it for a friend of mine. It's completely lined. Hand sewn with the saddle stitch. I used artificial sinew. 7-8 Veggie tanned tooling leather with a 4-5 veggie tanned tooling leather liner. I know it doesn't compare to the work I've seen here but it's my best so far. Quote
Members TexasJack Posted May 29, 2010 Members Report Posted May 29, 2010 That's a very nice looking holster! Quote
Members Eric F Posted May 29, 2010 Members Report Posted May 29, 2010 It looks great! Nice even stitching, Good even tone one the finish, and Nice Clean edges. On over all a good clean holster! I hope to see more of your work soon. Quote
Ambassador Luke Hatley Posted May 29, 2010 Ambassador Report Posted May 29, 2010 (edited) Nice looking Holster..........."Iffin you you drop in we can.... jawbone a spell and boil a pot of coffey" Edited May 29, 2010 by Luke Hatley Quote
Contributing Member TwinOaks Posted May 29, 2010 Contributing Member Report Posted May 29, 2010 Yeah, what Eric said. Very clean presentation. Ya done good! One question for you though.....hammer thong? It may not be needed, I was just curious. Quote
Members Ironwood Posted May 29, 2010 Author Members Report Posted May 29, 2010 (edited) Thanks everyone, for the kind words. TwinOaks, the revolver rides very low in the holster. The pattern I made this one from didn't show a strap being used. A pattern on the same sheet showed a hammer strap being called for on a holster where the revolver rode much higher in the holster. I'm really a newbie at holsters so I just went by the pattern. Edited May 29, 2010 by Ironwood Quote
David Posted May 29, 2010 Report Posted May 29, 2010 Very very nice, super clean, I'd wear that proudly any day. Dave Theobald Quote
MADMAX22 Posted May 29, 2010 Report Posted May 29, 2010 I agree looks great. With a holster like that I dont think that you really need a hammer thong on it. Kind of a question on that, werent hammer thongs more of a modern day addition to this style holster? I think I remember reading that they were not widely used back then but I cant remember. Quote
Members jeffroberts Posted June 3, 2010 Members Report Posted June 3, 2010 I agree looks great. With a holster like that I dont think that you really need a hammer thong on it. Kind of a question on that, werent hammer thongs more of a modern day addition to this style holster? I think I remember reading that they were not widely used back then but I cant remember. Quote
Members Ironwood Posted June 6, 2010 Author Members Report Posted June 6, 2010 Sorry I'm so late getting back here. Thanks for you nice comments. I think the hammer thong didn't become popular until the Western Movie era as holsters covered less and less of the revolver. Quote
Members Draxus Posted July 19, 2010 Members Report Posted July 19, 2010 Wow thats a good Looking Holster. Quote
Members katsass Posted July 22, 2010 Members Report Posted July 22, 2010 I've been doing some leather working off and on for a couple of years now. This is my latest holster. Made it for a friend of mine. It's completely lined. Hand sewn with the saddle stitch. I used artificial sinew. 7-8 Veggie tanned tooling leather with a 4-5 veggie tanned tooling leather liner. I know it doesn't compare to the work I've seen here but it's my best so far. VERY nice combination of a skirt holster and a California Slim Jim style, and very well executed. As said, the hammer thong came in around the 50's, IIRC, when the fast draw craze hit, and the movie westerns became a bit more than the black-and-white "B" grade kiddy shows. I see none with a hammer thong in my go-to referance book for historically accurate holster work "Packing Iron" until about then. Mike Quote
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