Members LuisPaulo Posted May 1, 2011 Members Report Posted May 1, 2011 Hi. I want to give a try on embossing leather, but I dont know wich material could I use. I saw Clay's tutorial, and he uses leather dust and rubber cement. Since these materials aren't ready available for me, I wonder if can I use wood dust, and I think PVA glue to make the mixture.... Quote
Contributing Member ClayB Posted May 1, 2011 Contributing Member Report Posted May 1, 2011 Some people have used wood dust and glue to make the mixture. This would make a filler that dries hard and stiff. You would not be able to do further shaping on the project once it had been filled with this filler like you can when using leather dust and rubber cement, but it would allow you to try the technique. Give it a try and see how it works for you. I can get leather dust for you, but shipping out of country can be quite expensive. Quote
Contributing Member TwinOaks Posted May 2, 2011 Contributing Member Report Posted May 2, 2011 If you have been making any leather products, you probably have scraps laying around. Take those scraps and sand, scrap, chop, grind, etc. to make your own dust. If you skive any projects, all those little peelings can be used. Quote
King's X Posted May 2, 2011 Report Posted May 2, 2011 F.O. Baird used torn up newspaper. So I guess you can use anything. I am sure you that you have your leather shavings around. Hidecrafter's sell a large bag of leather dust for $2.50 if the shipping is worth it to you. Good luck Quote
Members LuisPaulo Posted May 3, 2011 Author Members Report Posted May 3, 2011 Yep my friends !!! Tnak you for the replies. Today I'm thinking just like that. I have tons of scraps. I'll use that, and the best of all I'm recycling this material !!! Sorry for my bad English. Quote
Members BIGGUNDOCTOR Posted May 3, 2011 Members Report Posted May 3, 2011 Don't worry about your English, my Spanish is not that good, neither is my Portuguese, German, French, ......you get the idea. Quote
Members and Posted August 29, 2017 Members Report Posted August 29, 2017 I use dryer lint I collect the lint after drying towels the glue I use to fix the lint in place is tandy ecoweld grain to grain it remains plyable but very strong. Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.