Members rkrgirl Posted January 5, 2011 Members Report Posted January 5, 2011 Hi everyone! I recently stumbled upon this forum and have enjoyed lurking. I am now looking at a saddle that is for sale and the seller cannot find a maker's mark. They did provide a picture of the serial number. I cannot tell where it is located (maybe on the back side of the fender), but it looks like a Tex Tan number. I emailed Tex Tan to get some information and all they said is they thought this saddle was made in 1973. It has double buckstitching, what looks like an equitation seat and tapaderos. It does come with normal buckstitched stirrups as well. Both the tapaderos and normal stirrups look original with the saddle. Does anyone know if Tex Tan made tapaderos with some of thier saddles in the 70s? I'm not sure if I can post photos since I don't own the saddle. It is gorgeous, but I want to stear clear of any cheap Mexican saddles and I thought Tex Tan was pretty regular about stamping the saddles? Thank you! Quote
Members mulefool Posted January 6, 2011 Members Report Posted January 6, 2011 I don't know the answer to your question, but did you ask TexTan about it? I would think they would know, but I would also be surprised if they made a saddle without a makers stamp. If you post a pic f the saddle It might be possible to tell if the tapaderos are an added feature by comparing any tooling on them to the rest of the saddle. Chris Quote www.horseandmulegear.com
Members rkrgirl Posted January 6, 2011 Author Members Report Posted January 6, 2011 Thank you for the reply. I did try emailing TexTan. I had sent the serial number and asked if it was indeed one of their serial numbers and information on the saddle. The reply I got back was "I believe this was made in 1973". They didn't really claim the saddle and if it something I decide to purchase, I will probably push harder for information. I will try and attach pictures. This is not my saddle, so if I have violated a rule I am sorry and please delete my post. Everything looks original with the saddle. There is no mark on the latigo holder or fenders. The picture of the serial number looks like it is on the back side of the fender. I had also emailed the seller and they did not have any guesses on a maker. Thank you! Quote
Members mulefool Posted January 8, 2011 Members Report Posted January 8, 2011 Well, judging from the pics I would say the Taps look original to the saddle, too. I've just seen alot of TexTans and if I recall correctly seems like they always had the maker stamp in the middle of the fender. Quote www.horseandmulegear.com
Members Saddlebag Posted January 9, 2011 Members Report Posted January 9, 2011 (edited) TexTan has always stamped a steer head into the lower fender. Their info always appeared behind the cantle during the 60s and 70s. The piecrust horn trim has me doubting this saddle is a Tex Tan. (I could be wrong). The design of the forks, seat stitching. have me leaning toward Big Horn. Big Horn used a Longhorn fender stamp altho this might predate their use of such. Edited January 9, 2011 by Saddlebag Quote
Members rkrgirl Posted January 10, 2011 Author Members Report Posted January 10, 2011 Thank you for the replies. Saddlebag, the horn threw me off a bit as well. Admittedly, I haven't seen a ton of old TexTans, but every one I have seen has the maker's mark and I've never seen that style of horn. I like the old buckstitched look, but I will wait for one that is marked that I can be sure of what I am getting. Thanks for your help! Quote
Members Saddlebag Posted February 6, 2011 Members Report Posted February 6, 2011 Something you need to consider. No maker would spend the extra time and money to make a saddle with all the extras this saddle has without it being of decent quality. At least not back when this one was made. I even suspect it has a rawhide covered tree. Quote
Members rkrgirl Posted February 8, 2011 Author Members Report Posted February 8, 2011 Something you need to consider. No maker would spend the extra time and money to make a saddle with all the extras this saddle has without it being of decent quality. At least not back when this one was made. I even suspect it has a rawhide covered tree. It does appear to be very well made. I don't doubt someone put a lot of time and care into the making of this saddle. I decided on a different saddle (my other post) as I could verify the Hereford stamp on that one. Certainly the condition of this saddle is much better than the one I ended up with, but for some reason I like the look of the one in my other post. Hopefully with some elbow grease it will be a nice saddle. If nothing else, the price was right that it will look nice in my house if the leather is unsound! Quote
Members gothcowboy Posted March 11, 2011 Members Report Posted March 11, 2011 (edited) Hi everyone! I recently stumbled upon this forum and have enjoyed lurking. I am now looking at a saddle that is for sale and the seller cannot find a maker's mark. They did provide a picture of the serial number. I cannot tell where it is located (maybe on the back side of the fender), but it looks like a Tex Tan number. I emailed Tex Tan to get some information and all they said is they thought this saddle was made in 1973. It has double buckstitching, what looks like an equitation seat and tapaderos. It does come with normal buckstitched stirrups as well. Both the tapaderos and normal stirrups look original with the saddle. Does anyone know if Tex Tan made tapaderos with some of thier saddles in the 70s? I'm not sure if I can post photos since I don't own the saddle. It is gorgeous, but I want to stear clear of any cheap Mexican saddles and I thought Tex Tan was pretty regular about stamping the saddles? Thank you! I'd bet anything this is a Tex Tan, I rode in one just like it (minus the taps) in the 70's. Back then it was the somethingorother Cutter (I had the catalog it was in back in the day), and it's most recent version (by special request only) is called the Golden Cutter. Believe it or not, Tex Tan does/did make a double row buckstitched saddle in this century. Usually, the only market is with the Missouri Fox Trotter show peeps, so it isn't like there's huge demand. Tex Tan used to do a lot more custom work than they do now, and some private label stuff, so there's a good chance this model with factory taps was a custom order or a salesman's sample. Anymore, the mere mention of the word sends them into fits. "Can I get this with a black seat instead of brown?" could get you the death penalty with their customer service. Edited March 11, 2011 by gothcowboy Quote
Members Saddlebag Posted March 13, 2011 Members Report Posted March 13, 2011 There was a time a saddle company could be identified by the design of the stitching on the seat. Quote
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