Members Shooter McGavin Posted December 17, 2010 Members Report Posted December 17, 2010 So ya, I've been hand sewing a bunch of holsters recently and 3 of my fingers have really bad cuts in them from pulling the thread tight after each stitch. just wondering what the leatherworker.net mindhive does to solve this problem. I was thinking of using some light weight leather to make some "sleeves" or whatever for my most used fingers but wonder if this would just make my clumsy. Any insight would be much appreciated! Thanks Dan Quote Zlogonje Gunleathers
Members celticleather Posted December 17, 2010 Members Report Posted December 17, 2010 I used to use a couple of 1mm calfskin sleeves on the little finger of each hand, and found them to be very effective. However, over the years the skin in this area has become so hard that I don't need them any more! Quote When everyone is somebody, then no one's anybody
Members DuaneBallard Posted December 17, 2010 Members Report Posted December 17, 2010 Athletic tape like a boxer uses on their hands. I used to use a couple of 1mm calfskin sleeves on the little finger of each hand, and found them to be very effective. However, over the years the skin in this area has become so hard that I don't need them any more! Quote
Contributing Member JLSleather Posted December 17, 2010 Contributing Member Report Posted December 17, 2010 My buddy uses those slide things used for playing the guitar ... little plastic tube thing. I could never get the hang of them, and that athletic tape idea is sounding like it's worth a try ... Quote "Observation is 9/10 of the law." IF what you do is something that ANYBODY can do, then don't be surprised when ANYBODY does.
Members Casey Jordan Posted December 17, 2010 Members Report Posted December 17, 2010 I have used medical tape and duct tape, either works. The medical tape is easier since it is narrower. Quote Casey Jordan www.caseyjordansaddle.com www.artofthecowboymakers.com Q: Do you have A.D.D.? A: Look, there's a chicken
Members katsass Posted December 17, 2010 Members Report Posted December 17, 2010 So ya, I've been hand sewing a bunch of holsters recently and 3 of my fingers have really bad cuts in them from pulling the thread tight after each stitch. just wondering what the leatherworker.net mindhive does to solve this problem. I was thinking of using some light weight leather to make some "sleeves" or whatever for my most used fingers but wonder if this would just make my clumsy. Any insight would be much appreciated! Thanks Dan FWIW from a grumpy old man. I have hand-stitched for around 40 years now and find that I now have definite callouses at the crook in my little fingers, however, early on I used band-aids where I pulled my stitches tight. Easy on...easy off. Mike Quote NOTE TO SELF: Never try to hold a cat and an operating Dust buster at the same time!! At my age I find that I can live without sex..........but not without my glasses. Being old has an advantage.......nobody expects me to do anything in a hurry.
Cobra Steve Posted December 17, 2010 Report Posted December 17, 2010 Hey Dan, Iv'e got a great idea! What about a brand new COBRA Class 4 "Dream Machine". Wouldn't that be great!! A machine that does it for you! (HaHa) Steve Quote Thank You Steve Tayrien Leather Machine Co., Inc. 2141 E. Philadelphia St. Unit "U" Ontario, California 91761 1-866-962-9880 http://www.leathermachineco.com cobra@leathermachineco.com
Members Rawhide Posted December 17, 2010 Members Report Posted December 17, 2010 JoAnn Fabric sells a little quilter's thimble that you can fit on your fingers and they work great. http://www.joann.com/joann/catalog/productdetail.jsp?pageName=search&flag=true&PRODID=xprd1002396 Quote Marlon
Members bootsmt Posted December 17, 2010 Members Report Posted December 17, 2010 (edited) I use all leather weight lifting gloves, works fine and if I am pulling needles I put a pair of latex gloves on first under the gloves and can grip the needles. The length of the fingers of the gloves cover where the string wraps around my hand. Frank Edited December 17, 2010 by bootsmt Quote
Ambassador leatheroo Posted December 17, 2010 Ambassador Report Posted December 17, 2010 i made some little finger sleeves from neoprene...i cut up an old thin wetsuit. Quote "]http://leatheroo.blogspot
Members roo4u Posted December 18, 2010 Members Report Posted December 18, 2010 sports tape here to keep the thread from cutting into the creases of my fingers Quote TRACY MONSTER FARM SPECIALTIES-custom tack for dog, horse and human
Members amuckart Posted December 18, 2010 Members Report Posted December 18, 2010 So ya, I've been hand sewing a bunch of holsters recently and 3 of my fingers have really bad cuts in them from pulling the thread tight after each stitch. just wondering what the leatherworker.net mindhive does to solve this problem. I was thinking of using some light weight leather to make some "sleeves" or whatever for my most used fingers but wonder if this would just make my clumsy. I had exactly the same problem until I got used to the traditional solution used by shoemakers. Inseaming thread gets pulled really tight and shoemakers use a combination of a thumbstall, which is a little tube of leather that goes over the thumb of your awl hand, a hand leather which is a tube of leather sized to go over the palm of your off hand with a hole in it for the thumb, and awl handles that have a 'capstan' end the thread can be wound around. This is slightly difficult to explain without recourse to pictures I don't have right now, but the technique is to put the off-hand bristle through first, then the awl-hand one and pull them through almost all the way. The off-hand thread gets wrapped around the hand leather and pulled and the awl-hand thread between the fingers holding it and the work gets hooked by the back of the thumb over the thumbstall and then hooked by the butt of the awl haft and pulled. The combination of the hook over the thumb and the wrap around the awl haft makes a secure grip. Once you're used to it and it becomes part of the natural rhythm of sewing it's very little effort at all. That may have made no sense whatsoever, but I'll endeavour to dig out my kit, which is still buried post move, and take some pictures. Quote -- Al. Medieval Stuff: http://wherearetheelves.net Non-Medieval, including my machines: http://alasdair.muckart.net
Contributing Member TwinOaks Posted December 18, 2010 Contributing Member Report Posted December 18, 2010 I developed callouses at the little finger joints as well. I also learned the very important lesson that if you hand sew while saving up for a stitcher.....you save money faster. Quote Mike DeLoach Esse Quam Videri (Be rather than Seem) "Don't learn the tricks of the trade.....Learn the trade." "Teach what you know......Learn what you don't." LEATHER ARTISAN'S DIGITAL GUILD on Facebook.
Members Boertjie Posted December 18, 2010 Members Report Posted December 18, 2010 Same old problem, lookup this link. Sorry about the photo's, it was my first post. Hope it helps. http://leatherworker.net/forum/index.php?showtopic=781&view=findpost&p=122614 Quote Schalk His tongue was framed to music,And his hand was armed with skill; His face was the mould of beauty, And his heart the throne of will. R.W. Emerson
Contributing Member UKRay Posted December 18, 2010 Contributing Member Report Posted December 18, 2010 Band-Aid's, little tubes of leather - I've tried 'em all LOL Sadly, the little tubes of leather vanished somewhere under the bench and I used up all the wretched band-Aids so right now I'm back growing blisters again. I know they will turn into calluses soon enough, but you have my sympathy. I should never have purchased that sewing machine! Ray Quote "Some mornings, it's just not worth chewing through the leather straps" Ray Hatley www.barefootleather.co.uk
Members Shooter McGavin Posted December 19, 2010 Author Members Report Posted December 19, 2010 Thank you for all the advice! I used medical cloth tape with an over wrap of electrical tape and it was perfect. A machine... maybe one day... if I can keep selling product. Thanks! Quote Zlogonje Gunleathers
Members Shorts Posted December 20, 2010 Members Report Posted December 20, 2010 I wore a glove, plus I installed some leather pads on the palm and finger tip for when I needed to push a needle through. Quote
Members Saddlebag Posted December 20, 2010 Members Report Posted December 20, 2010 (edited) With two-needle stictching fingers on both hands can wind up sore. I wound up cutting the tips off my old leather work gloves, I prefer to use this style of stitching on certain pieces of harness, it one thread breaks the other holds, unlike the chain stitch of the awl or a machine. For pushing a stubborn needle through I wear a sailor's palm on my thumb. Tandy sells them altho I made my own from scrap leather and a penny. Edited December 20, 2010 by Saddlebag Quote
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