Members Hammered Leather Posted December 22, 2010 Members Report Posted December 22, 2010 Hello everyone. I just wanted to share a few pics with you guys to see what you think. Please comment. I would really be interested in your views on my leather work. Any tips would greatly appreciated. All the best and have a merry Christmas! http://s1189.photobucket.com/albums/z423/HammeredLeather/Leather%20Belts/ http://s1189.photobucket.com/albums/z423/HammeredLeather/Guitar%20Straps/ http://s1189.photobucket.com/albums/z423/HammeredLeather/Growth%20Chart/ Quote
Contributing Member UKRay Posted December 22, 2010 Contributing Member Report Posted December 22, 2010 Nice belts. Do you make the hardware too? Ray Quote
Members Hammered Leather Posted December 22, 2010 Author Members Report Posted December 22, 2010 Nice belts. Do you make the hardware too? Ray Hi there Ray, thanks for the comment. No, unfortunately I did nt make the hardware. I purchased them from Tandy Leather. Quote
Contributing Member Ferg Posted December 22, 2010 Contributing Member Report Posted December 22, 2010 Hello everyone. I just wanted to share a few pics with you guys to see what you think. Please comment. I would really be interested in your views on my leather work. Any tips would greatly appreciated. All the best and have a merry Christmas! http://s1189.photobu...eather%20Belts/ http://s1189.photobu...uitar%20Straps/ http://s1189.photobu...Growth%20Chart/ A Merry Christmas to you too. Nothing wrong with your tooling that practice will not improve. Beveling a little rough. You need to put a finish on the edges of your belts. You have selected appropriate hardware but IMHO these are not $100 to $200 belts. Tandy hardware is cheap Chinese, 'nuff said. Take a look at one of Bobby Park's belts. ferg Quote
Members Hammered Leather Posted December 22, 2010 Author Members Report Posted December 22, 2010 A Merry Christmas to you too. Nothing wrong with your tooling that practice will not improve. Beveling a little rough. You need to put a finish on the edges of your belts. You have selected appropriate hardware but IMHO these are not $100 to $200 belts. Tandy hardware is cheap Chinese, 'nuff said. Take a look at one of Bobby Park's belts. ferg Thanks Ferg, I really appreciate the feed back. I know the prices are way off! What do feel the best price is for these peices. I will take a look BP's belts as well. Thanks again Ferg. Mike Quote
Contributing Member Ferg Posted December 23, 2010 Contributing Member Report Posted December 23, 2010 Thanks Ferg, I really appreciate the feed back. I know the prices are way off! What do feel the best price is for these peices. I will take a look BP's belts as well. Thanks again Ferg. Mike Mike, Pricing is quite often decided by your clientele, at least the ones you are aiming at. If you want to get into high end belts I would suggest you practice your work and consider some more expensive/classic hardware. Your selection of hardware design is okay. Understand that Bobby is a top of the hill craftsman. His belts are beautiful, finely detailed, expertly carved and finished. ferg Quote
Chief31794 Posted December 23, 2010 Report Posted December 23, 2010 A Merry Christmas to you too.Nothing wrong with your tooling that practice will not improve. Beveling a little rough. You need to put a finish on the edges of your belts. You have selected appropriate hardware but IMHO these are not $100 to $200 belts. Tandy hardware is cheap Chinese, 'nuff said. Take a look at one of Bobby Park's belts. ferg Got to agree with Ferg, these don't look to be $100 belts. Are they all tooled, the black one appears to be embossed as opposed to tooled. Another suggestion is that the back sides are not well finished in addition to the suggestions Ferg made. Ken Quote
Members Hammered Leather Posted December 23, 2010 Author Members Report Posted December 23, 2010 Got to agree with Ferg, these don't look to be $100 belts. Are they all tooled, the black one appears to be embossed as opposed to tooled. Another suggestion is that the back sides are not well finished in addition to the suggestions Ferg made. Ken Yes, thast is absolutely correct. Only the brown belt is tooled, the Black belt is embossed. What is the best way to finish the back side of a belt? Thanks for the feed back guys. Just to say, that these are the first leather projects i have ever worked on! And all critism is muc appreciated... Have a great day all. One more question...I am having trouble uploading pics as they are larger than 1.46mb? I am using a 12mpix cam. Any suggestions? Quote
Members Hammered Leather Posted December 23, 2010 Author Members Report Posted December 23, 2010 Mike, Pricing is quite often decided by your clientele, at least the ones you are aiming at. If you want to get into high end belts I would suggest you practice your work and consider some more expensive/classic hardware. Your selection of hardware design is okay. Understand that Bobby is a top of the hill craftsman. His belts are beautiful, finely detailed, expertly carved and finished. ferg Thank you very much Ferg, again, I really appreciate your feed back! I am happy to know that a well expereinced leather worker such as your self is pushing me in the right direction. I truely would like to carry on this form of 'ART" in hopes of one day inspirering others to do the same. There is definately something to be said about B.Parks work! It has certainly inspired me...I would have never know about any one his work if it was'nt for you ferg. Thanks! Quote
dirtclod Posted December 23, 2010 Report Posted December 23, 2010 Their are lots of free resizing programs for your pictures if you your camera didn't come with software for that. Crop the picture first and resize. Quote
Members Hammered Leather Posted December 23, 2010 Author Members Report Posted December 23, 2010 Their are lots of free resizing programs for your pictures if you your camera didn't come with software for that. Crop the picture first and resize. Thanks. We,ll try Quote
Chief31794 Posted December 24, 2010 Report Posted December 24, 2010 Back sides of straps/belts can be finished many ways. Repeat what Ferg said, look at Bobby Parks belts, he does intricate Swivel Knife work on the backs of his belts, you can burnish them, etc. It appeared you dyed the backs and that the dye was uneven, the back will accept dye much more irratically than the front. I personally never liked dyed backs, I like to leave them natural but burnish them till they are smooth unless I make both sides finished to do that I use 3-4 ounce (belt 2-3 oz for an instrument strap) leather and bond it together "back-to-back" with contact cement to provide a smoth surface for the front and back, or I line a normal 4-5 oz (belt 3-4 oz for instrument straps) piece with a 2-3 ounce liner just depending on the desired effect. Normally if I line a belt or strap (I make mostly instrument straps) I also sew the strap around the edges for a more finished look. Just depends. The only exception is Mandolin Straps and Cradle straps for Banjos, I normally keep those pretty thin (2-3 oz with a natural burnished back), the reason is that Mandolins are not very heavy and the attachment at the scroll has to be pretty thin and while the Banjo's are much heavier (some around 13 lbs or more), the strap is semi-permanently installed and has to wrap around the head an store in the case with the Banjo. If the banjo strap is not a cradle strap design (hangs from the J-hooks) then I use normal thickness leather. Back to your question about how to finish backs, like I said there are several ways to do it, folks much better at this than I maybe will jump in and post some tips and techniques for finishing belt/strap backs, I've seen quite a bit on edges but not much on backs. Ken Quote
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