Members Vikefan Posted September 16, 2010 Members Report Posted September 16, 2010 My wife's mother died not too long ago and she inherited her purse. It is a leather purse not sure of the maker, but it has a turquoise stone inlayed into a strap (laced) that helps hold the purse flap closed. I would like to get some pointers on how to do this without loosing our stone. I attached some pics to try to get my point across more effectively. Please help!! Vikefan Quote
dirtclod Posted September 16, 2010 Report Posted September 16, 2010 Just a guess because i never have tried it but i think a 2 part epoxy or JB Weld should work. I have used both things to glue different types of materials togeather and they worked fine for me. But i would try it on some scrap and a rock you pick up first. Quote
Members smokeydaz Posted September 16, 2010 Members Report Posted September 16, 2010 On 9/16/2010 at 8:56 AM, Vikefan said: My wife's mother died not too long ago and she inherited her purse. It is a leather purse not sure of the maker, but it has a turquoise stone inlayed into a strap (laced) that helps hold the purse flap closed. I would like to get some pointers on how to do this without loosing our stone. I attached some pics to try to get my point across more effectively. Please help!! Vikefan Quote
Members smokeydaz Posted September 16, 2010 Members Report Posted September 16, 2010 I like the setting and I have never tried it but I probably will now. My wife makes jewlery and has some nice stones that I think would look great on a buckle. I would try cutting small oval. Then cutting the hole in the center the shape of the stone but smaller. then I would wet the leather and form it down over the stone to make a nice tight nesting for the stone. This would give more area around the edge and bottom to cement to while also framing it in. Stitch or lace it to strap or buckle. Like I said I have never tried this but it is what I would try. I would make a practice piece first of course to make sure it works . Looks good on paper doesn't always work in real world. Good Luck !David Quote
Members DCKNIVES Posted September 16, 2010 Members Report Posted September 16, 2010 I do both methods as above quite often, so both do work but the determining factor is what your working on and the type of stone.If it's simply a cabachon, I epoxy the stone to a piece of fiberboard spacer (roughup the mating surfaces real good) and then cut an opening for the cabachon and inlay.The other method I have done with odd shaped stones and recon. stone is to grind a small lip on the stone with a Dremel then cut the opening a bit smaller, wet and mold over the stone.Dave Quote
EricDobson Posted September 16, 2010 Report Posted September 16, 2010 Awesome examples Dave. I'm just starting with leather and I'm constantly amazed at what's possible, things I've never seen before. That's some creative, clean work. Very nice. Quote
Ann McGrath Posted September 16, 2010 Report Posted September 16, 2010 Silva Fox has a method of setting stones in leather that's lovely. This link has a discussion of same right here on leatherworker.net Quote
Members Vikefan Posted September 17, 2010 Author Members Report Posted September 17, 2010 (edited) On 9/16/2010 at 1:52 PM, DCKNIVES said: I do both methods as above quite often, so both do work but the determining factor is what your working on and the type of stone.If it's simply a cabachon, I epoxy the stone to a piece of fiberboard spacer (roughup the mating surfaces real good) and then cut an opening for the cabachon and inlay.The other method I have done with odd shaped stones and recon. stone is to grind a small lip on the stone with a Dremel then cut the opening a bit smaller, wet and mold over the stone.Dave On 9/16/2010 at 1:52 PM, DCKNIVES said: I do both methods as above quite often, so both do work but the determining factor is what your working on and the type of stone.If it's simply a cabachon, I epoxy the stone to a piece of fiberboard spacer (roughup the mating surfaces real good) and then cut an opening for the cabachon and inlay.The other method I have done with odd shaped stones and recon. stone is to grind a small lip on the stone with a Dremel then cut the opening a bit smaller, wet and mold over the stone.Dave Edited September 17, 2010 by Vikefan Quote
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