Members bitone40 Posted July 6, 2010 Members Report Posted July 6, 2010 Hello and good morning folks, I have some questions on a batch of 'roon that I made up a couple of weeks ago and let me tell you the process I used I made two holsters and diped them on different days, the first one got diped and then BS bath followed and allowed to dry for 10-15 min and then proceeded with the molding and it came out great, then let air dry for about 15 hrs, well while reading here while I was at work and holster was drying, I read that I forgot to give it a fresh water bath after the BS bath and it could cause burning so when I got home it was completely dry and applied two light coats of oil and it is sitting as is, it looks great and have no complaints about it, now the other one is a different story, I rooned it ,BS bath for about 5 min and fresh water bath this time and let sit for 20 min and then molded and let dry and then oiled, now here is my problem, between the two coats of oil, white spots started to form on both sides and on the insides, I put another layer of oil and they dissappered so now I'm waiting to see results , what are the white spots and why are they only on the holster that I added water to? Is it mold or is it oils seeping out or what, is the holster ruined? These are my 1st two dippings of roon besides all the test pieces that came out looking good, the only thing I can think of is that the problem holster was done the day after the first one and I used the same soda solution and it was probably a lot weeker the next day, and the swhite spots do not rub out or buff out Thanks for all he help and sorry so long to read BenBen Quote Strong Hide Holsters Facebook Page My website (under construction ) page
Members bitone40 Posted July 7, 2010 Author Members Report Posted July 7, 2010 Thanks LW, no more white spots after second coat of oil, I guess we will never know what it was, or at least I wont Quote Strong Hide Holsters Facebook Page My website (under construction ) page
Members particle Posted July 7, 2010 Members Report Posted July 7, 2010 Sorry you didn't get any feedback - I just made my first batch of the stuff, and haven't strained it yet so I haven't gotten to use it thus far. I was hoping someone would chime in with some feedback as I'm needing to figure out what the proper work flow is. Did the white spots go away on their own? Or did you have to buff them out? Quote Eric Adamswww.adamsleatherworks.com | Facebook | YouTube | Instagram
Members bitone40 Posted July 7, 2010 Author Members Report Posted July 7, 2010 (edited) Thanks , yea after the second coat of neets oil, they went away on there own, I ran a bunch of test strips of leather in the roon and never applied a clear wash water to any of them and never had any problems , well the one that I did a fresh water bath after the baking soda is the one that has the white spots, the work flow I did on the good one was assemble and and stitch, dip in roon for one minute two times and came out solid black, went straight into baking soda dip for about two to three minutes and pull out and what ever didn't get soaked in in two minutes I just wiped it with a paper towel and let sit for 10 to 15 minutes then mould, I let it air dry for about 15 hrs and oiled, it took that oil in so fast but that's all I put and then about 10hrs later put the second coat and let it sit and dry, on this holster I put a light coat of tan kote and it is looking good so far , but going to put a second coat on it later today and see if its any good to use in the future, the out come so far is good but ill see what it does. Hey Eric I got some questions for you if you don't mind, I saw your new pics and the edgeing is looking awesome now, what are you doing now to them, I have been buying all the supplies to try the same technique as hidepounder and got the rest of them all last night , thanks again Ben Edited July 7, 2010 by bitone40 Quote Strong Hide Holsters Facebook Page My website (under construction ) page
Members particle Posted July 7, 2010 Members Report Posted July 7, 2010 Thanks for the workflow description. I'll give my batch a try in the next couple of days hopefully... For burnishing dyed holsters, I simply dampen the edges with a sponge with water right before I do the forming. Once the edges are damp, I run the edges over my burnisher that's mounted in my drill press (wooden dowel with some grooves filed in it with a round rasp). All I'm basically trying to accomplish at this point is to round the edges up a bit, and smooth it out some - basically getting the basic rounded shape around the edges. After forming, I put the holster in the oven to harden the leather, and then air dry it in front of a fan overnight. At this point, it's very difficult to round and shape the edges because the leather doesn't manipulate very easily - this is why I do the initial edge shaping before the molding process. After it has dried in front of a fan overnight, I'll dye the edges (I always use black, unless it's a natural holster), then in an hour or two I burnish with Gum. Lately I've scrubbed a little beeswax on the edge (instead of Gum) and burnished again with a wooden dowel with a strip of canvas taped onto it (it wraps around the dowel when you turn on the drill). For a natural holster, I'll spend a little more time initially to get some good burnished color before the forming process, then do it again with water after the holster has been formed and dried. Then I may hit it with some light brown dye to darken it a bit more if the burnishing didn't work very well. There are probably MUCH better methods than what I do - I'm just too lazy to order any other products. Quote Eric Adamswww.adamsleatherworks.com | Facebook | YouTube | Instagram
Members bitone40 Posted July 7, 2010 Author Members Report Posted July 7, 2010 Cool, so thats basically what you are doing in ur video, I was doing the same thing until I tried using beeswax after the dying and and before the final finish until I used it on my businesses card holder and my new carry rig and saw it cracking and peeling off, I should have known,so I wouldn't recommended using it if until you test it out, I do have some half and half of pariffin and beeswax that I have to try also, so I may go back o the gum if I can't get the new way going. Thanks again Ben Quote Strong Hide Holsters Facebook Page My website (under construction ) page
Members ChuckBurrows Posted July 9, 2010 Members Report Posted July 9, 2010 I rooned it ,BS bath for about 5 min and fresh water bath this time and let sit for 20 min The BS Bath at 5 minutes is far too long and unneccessary and very possibly counterproductive since the possibility of "burning" it is increased exponentially. I just dip it in the baking soda and water mix (no more than 1/8 cupt to 1/2-3/4 gallons of fresh water) is needed and then rinse in cold clear water. As to the 20 minutes in the fresh water bath - if you are doing that to case the leather OK, but otherwise again not needed, just a good rinse and wipe off the excess........... The white spots may have been/probably were excess baking soda oozing out of the leather............ Quote Wild Rose Trading Company Two roads diverged in a wood, and I, I took the one less traveled by, And that has made all the difference.
Members bitone40 Posted July 9, 2010 Author Members Report Posted July 9, 2010 The BS Bath at 5 minutes is far too long and unneccessary and very possibly counterproductive . The white spots may have been/probably were excess baking soda oozing out of the leather............ good call on that , that may be what happened because the one that didnt have spots on it was just a quick dip into to bath and i thought it needed more time soaking , i guess i was wrong and the 20 min to sit was meaning to sit out and dry to be moulded it was just rinsed under the faucet to get all the stuff off , sorry i should have clarified thanks for your help ben Quote Strong Hide Holsters Facebook Page My website (under construction ) page
Members particle Posted July 14, 2010 Members Report Posted July 14, 2010 Well, I tried my Vinegaroon a couple days ago and tried to form my holsters last night. Couple things struck me.... First, this stuff stinks! Is it possible to get rid of that smell?? The leather - I dunked it in the roon for maybe 5-10 seconds, let it sit for a minute, then dunked it again just to make sure I had thorough penetration. Then I dunked it for maybe 10 - 20 seconds in a baking soda solution in the ratio ChuckBurrows mentioned a couple posts back. Lastly, I rinsed it thoroughly in water and set it on a paper towel to dry. I was a little dismayed to see how much discoloration transferred to the paper towel. I'm not sure what is transferring (since it's not dye) - perhaps some of the "stuff" in the leather is just oozing out and getting on the paper towel? What threw me was that this eliminates the possibility of roon'ing a holster with white thread AFTER it's already assembled and formed, which brings me to my next point. I had a very hard time molding the roon'ed leather to the firearm. Even after soaking it for maybe a minute, it just didn't want to form very easily and would hardly hold the shape I was asking it to hold (yes, I said "please..."). I know it's a bit waterproofed when it's rooned, but I'd heard it could still be formed. I'm not entirely sure about that - at least not to the point natural veg-tanned leather is capable of. So, in the future, If a holster is to have black thread, I'll roon it after it's assembled and formed to the gun. If it's to have white thread, I'll just keep using black dye and dye my pieces prior to assembly. Anyone have any insight to offer that may be of some help to the smell and forming issue? Quote Eric Adamswww.adamsleatherworks.com | Facebook | YouTube | Instagram
Members bitone40 Posted July 14, 2010 Author Members Report Posted July 14, 2010 I had a very hard time molding the roon'ed leather to the firearm. Even after soaking it for maybe a minute, it just didn't want to form very easily and would hardly hold the shape I was asking it to hold Anyone have any insight to offer that may be of some help to the smell and forming issue? hey particle, did you mold right after you dipped in roon or did you roon' it and the BS bath it and freshwater bath then let dry and then after its all dry did you rewet with fresh water and then mold it ? in all my research i read that everyone was moulding right after the roon'ing process , thats what I did but I did let it dry for about 15-20 min just like I do on a regular holster getting ready to mould , I had no promlems moulding at all , it was just like it had water in it , and for the smell I also read the BS bath is supposed to kill the smell , if I remember right the smell is the roon' still activating on the leather and it is supposed to go away in a couple of days , uh the smell is there on my holsters after two weeks so I dont know whats going on . I still have to mess around with it and figure this stuff out . hope any of this helps or makes sense ben Quote Strong Hide Holsters Facebook Page My website (under construction ) page
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