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Posted

One thing you may want to try is to sand your main seam edges. I use a belt sander. If you dont have a belt sander you can still do it by hand. With my belt sander, I do first pass with 80 grit, evens everything up and gets rid of excess glue. Next i wet the edge slightly, and then give it a couple of passes on belt sander with 120 grit. This adds an almost burnishing effect. Then I bevel the edge and slick it up with glycerine bar saddle soap, rubbed in with canvas or denim. Then I give the edge a pass on the burnisher which I use a wooden drawer knob on a drill press.

When i did edges before the days of the belt sander, I would keep going with the sand paper until I finished with 400 grit. (80, 150, 220, 400) Thankfully those days are gone.

Hope this helps. You sure do good work.

Thanks for the tips and for the compliment.

No belt sander but I have all sorts of wood files and sandpaper - do you think I should try to glue those gaps closed in the main seam before I finish the edging?

The saddle soap treatment - do you rub the bar of soap on the seam? Or do you dissolve it with water then rub it in with the canvas?

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Posted (edited)

Don't worry about trying to "fill in" the gaps, just sand them smooth... I use the unscented "Nutrigena" brand glyserine soap that you can by at any drug store and I rub it right on the seam to coat it, then burnish with a piece of canvas, rubbing in only one direction.. the canvas creates friction/heat and that is enough to help "melt" the glyserine soap into the leather.

As said by those before, "Nice job". That is a very good first project and I am sure like the rest of us, you learned a lot in that first go... They only get better from here!

Edited by Tac

-Tac

"Well, I guess we did our good deed for the day Mayor"-Wyatt Earp "Tombstone"

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Posted

Thanks for the tips and for the compliment.

No belt sander but I have all sorts of wood files and sandpaper - do you think I should try to glue those gaps closed in the main seam before I finish the edging?

The saddle soap treatment - do you rub the bar of soap on the seam? Or do you dissolve it with water then rub it in with the canvas?

I don't know about trying to glue the gaps at this point. I'm hesitant to give any advice on that. If you sand and finish the edges without glueing them you are still going to have a very good looking usable holster.

I agree with what tac said about the saddle soap. Tandy has it too. I cut a manageable chunk off the bar, wet the edge and rub the bar on the edge. I did take a thread spool with a dowel glued through it, covered with denim, and chucked up in my drill press for doing the edges. In my opinion The drill press works better than rubbing the edges by hand.

I have no experience finishing with natural stuff like walnut shells or vinagroon. If you search this forum you should be able to find what you are looking for.

haysholsters@hotmail.com

NRA Life Member

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Posted

I did take the time to dab a bit of barge glue into the gap in the seam with a cheapo stiff bristle artist brush doing one 3 inch section at a time. I clamped each section for a few minutes in my home made stitching pony. The seam closed up nicely and the excess glue came right off when I went to work on the edge with files and then with a sanding drum in the Dremel. Worked like a charm!

Tomorrow I'll get a bar of that soap.

Thanks again for the tips!

I gotta finish this one before I start the next but I'm already champing at the bit....I've got some ideas I can't wait to try out.

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Posted

Great first time out! I too am anxious to see your next work.

I agree with eveyones comments (darn I was too slow to respond)!

I use the Fiebings glycerine bar saddle soap too with denim or canvas (thanks Hidepounder!) but I can't get it at my local Tandy.

I go to a local tack shop and get it cheaper than most other places. A farm & fleet type place will often have a tack section too.

I'll have to give Tac's "Nutrigena" glycerine bar soap a try, thanks!

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Posted

I haven't read every post in this thread, but if it hasn't already been said, I'd suggest that next time you make sure to glue all the way to the edge, which should eliminate those gaps in your edge. It sounds like you're a wood worker.

Also, If you have a drill press, take a wooden dowel (like the wooden dowel from a sponge paint brush) and cut off the sponge tip. Place it in your drill press, turn it on, then use a round wood rasp (like a chain saw blade sharpener, but a little bigger) and cut grooves in your dowel. While it's still on, wrap some sand paper around it to sand it smooth and you have yourself a custom burnisher! Not the greatest (wood's too soft), but it should last you for about 100 holsters or more. You can see an example of the one I made in my video on my website.

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