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Posted

I want to get a little discussion going on an article in the latest LCSJ on relining saddle skirts. There were a few things in there I guess I never thought about doing. The first was using thinned down dextrin paste and weighting the skirts to make it stick. He mentioned using that so you could pull the wool off easily later. Fair enough I guess, but I haven’t had much of an issue with getting skirts off that were rubber cemented on. Are there any advantages to the dextrin that people who haven’t used it much need to know?

The other thing was his complaints with all the ring shank nails holding on the rigging with the pocketed bars in his example pictures. I’d sure agree with that, but I approach it differently. Nobody ever told me to leave the riggings on the tree, I just do. I cut the stitches to the skirts and leave the riggings in place. When the woolskins need replacing, generally the thread or lace used on the pocketed bars is ready to be replaced too. There are a few that the thread has worn or rotted out and the skirts fall away long before the fleece has worn. I reline and then usually resew the pocketed bars back through the original holes. Most of these were originally handsewn about 3 or 4 spi, so not a huge deal to do it on the stand. Not as easy as lugs, and I charge more replacing wool on pocketed bars vs. lugs to reflect that time spent resewing.

Sometimes I will go ahead and trim back the excess and put lugs in on replacements. I usually do this for the pocketed bars/riggings that were machine sewn and the stitch line was cut close enough there is not enough good leather on the pocket to sew through. Any thoughts on any of this?

Bruce Johnson

Malachi 4:2

"the windshield's bigger than the mirror, somewhere west of Laramie" - Dave Stamey

Vintage Refurbished And Selected New Leather Tools For Sale - www.brucejohnsonleather.com

  • Members
Posted

Bruce, I've never used any of the paste, but I have had a couple of discussions about it with a friend who has been building saddles for 50 years. He uses rubber cement on his skirt linings.................but does still use some paste on swell covers sometimes that have quite a bit of undercut to the swells. He commented that he figured most of skirt linings they used to put on with the paste probably turned loose somewhat during the first few rides. I personally use rubber cement on the linings.

I also leave the rigs on the tree when doing a reline job. When possible / practical I convert those pocketed rigs over to lug straps. JW

www.jwwrightsaddlery.com

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Posted

I have never used the paste to line new skirts, but I have relined many that were originally put together with it. I've never liked it because as you're taking it apart the paste comes out as a fine powder, or sometimes it comes off in chunks. If you don't see it or brush your table off well enough and then get some water on it makes a mess. Chris

www.horseandmulegear.com

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Posted

Good topic, I use dextrin paste quite a lot. I put it under swell covers, horn caps and wraps, and I have even thought about putting it on my oatmeal in the morning. I know it is old school stuff but I like it because it works well for putting on pieces that are wet, it allows you to move a part around to get it where you want, it fills small voids, and it seems to stiffen the leather slightly as it soaks in and dries. That said I do not use it to put on skirt linings. In my area I very seldom remove a synthetic lining and replace it with woolskin as Dick has done in his article. Most of my relines are woolskin that has failed, and often we are going back with a Kodel or better yet 100% wool on a synthetic backer. In our hot and humid area woolskin does not hold up well over time and tends to let go of its fleece. On the other hand the only synthetic linings we replace are the cheap ones we call teddy bear material that is put on the real low end mass produced saddles. I have a saddle in my shop right now I built a few years ago and the first thing that has brought it back to the saddle shop is hair lose. I have started to use more 100% wool but on a sturdy synthetic backer, I know its not old school but it keeps the saddles out of the shop. I would warn anyone not to use dextrin or any other gooey water based cements on synthetic backer material as it will come through the material and gum up the fuzz.

I don't care for ring shank nails used on parts that will have to be removed in future repairs. I like the old hot dipped galv. nails as they hold well but can be removed, its too bad they have all but disappeared from supply stores. The mass producers of saddles do use to many ring shank nails that are hard to remove, but they make up for it with their use of staples that fall out on their own.

As far as bar pockets go. most of the time I will leave them on the saddle and hand sew them back through the new wool...... Jeff

Horsewreck, aka, Jeff M. Hairgrove

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Posted

OK, for my two cents. I have never used the dextrin. I do use rubber contact cement almost exclusively. I sometimes use 3M Super 77 on some leather projects, but; that's another story. When re-fleecing a saddle, I only use sheep skin, and as for the pockets vs the lugs, I personally use lugs when I can, and only re-pocket a saddle if it is at the customers request. Most generally, I leave the rigging in place unless it requires replacing. Now then, for ring shank nails, I don't use them, in fact I have started to use less and less of the blue tacks also. On the last two saddles I took to using #6 X 1" drywall screws in place of where I normally would use blue tacks that I have to keep putting in half way and then removing (never counted, but; I wouldn't be surprised if we assemble and take apart a saddle 100 times during fitting of pieces and construction)and in place of ring shank nails. They hold better, I believe they are stronger, and most importantly, they can be put in and taken out numorous times easily with out accidently making marks on the leather. I would be interested if I am the only one doing that or what you guys think of the dry-wall screws idea.

Bondo Bob

Posted

Bondo Bob i don't think i would use the dry wall screws on a saddle becuase their pretty brittle. Put one in a vice and bend it will a pair pf pliers. It will break right off. I use screws but i try to get stainless steel ones for use on a saddle because their alot stronger.

John

I'm old enough to know that i don't know everything.

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Posted

Bondo Bob i don't think i would use the dry wall screws on a saddle becuase their pretty brittle. Put one in a vice and bend it will a pair pf pliers. It will break right off. I use screws but i try to get stainless steel ones for use on a saddle because their alot stronger.

John

Bruce,

I use a wheat wallpaper paste. It was recommended to me by another saddlemaker. The advantage over rubber cement is that if the saddle ever gets wet, the paste will reattach, and the rubber cement will not. I use the "Golden Harvest" brand of wallpaper paste. It comes in an 8-ounce box. I mix about one-quarter cup at a time...thinned down to a gravy texture. After gluing the wool skins down, I lay a saddle blanket over them and weight them down for several days to allow proper drying. This is also easy to work with on horn wraps and swell covers.

Aermotor

  • Members
Posted

Aermotor, Is wheat paste a brother to dextrin? As I understand it dextrin is modified starch of wheat or corn. What is in wall paper paste besides wheat starch? Sounds like you use the wall paper paste for the same things dextrin is used for, horn cap & wraps, swell covers and so on. Just wondering.... Jeff

Horsewreck, aka, Jeff M. Hairgrove

  • Members
Posted

Dirt Clod, guess I didn't make it clear enough. I use D W screws in place of the tacks that I have to keep putting in and taking out during the construction of the saddle. At the end, for final assembly I do use stainless.

Bondo Bob

  • Members
Posted

Jeff,

I think the dextrin and the wheat paste are very similar. I think the wallpaper paste may have mold inhibitors in it. I've only heard the older makers refer to it as wheat paste anyway. Bob Marrs in Amarillo is the one that recommended it to me, so I know that it has been proven.

Thanks,

Aermotor

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