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Posted

Wareagle50 - you can buy a good bone folder from Springfield Leather. I personally wet my holster, then while the holster is fairly wet, I begin to "find' the shape of the gun with my fingers. I use double layers of 8-9oz leather (totals about 1/4" thick), and that can be pretty hard to manipulate if the leather isn't wet enough. However, if the leather is too wet, you'll be like a dog chasing his tail - it's fun to watch, but he just keeps running around in circles... As the leather begins to dry out, you can begin refining the detail of the holster with your bone folder's smooth edges, then proceed to the sharper edges of the folder to cut in the detail. I like to use a pear shader to help make the indention in the trigger guard area.

You might also take a look at the craft section of your local art supply store - look for their clay modeling tools. You should be able to buy a set of wooden modeling tools with various edges, shapes, curves, etc. Sand them smooth, seal them really well, then buff them smooth and they should last a long time. Or, you can just use them as-is, and they'll probably work just as well, though they may wear out more quickly.

i did my wet molding pretty much like you said but i think the butter knife was a bad idea.

modeling tools, great idea. thank you.

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Posted

You've ALMOST got an Avenger design there. Why not step over the edge? Combine the rear belt tunnel and the front reinforcement piece into one wraparound affair.

You might round the corners a bit more, and bring the stitching a wee bit closer to the edge.

And move the sweat shield 1/4" back from where it looks perfect on the pattern, because it always automagically shifts forward about that far when you fold the leather over......

Also, my pet peeve: grip clearance. Looks a little tight.

Nice job, though. I made my first holster for that very model of pistol. It was an abomination, and I wasn't happy with the 2nd or 3rd attempts, either. It's a tough one to get right, and unforgiving on the belt, either digging painfully into you, flopping around, or printing obviously against cover garments.

big o,

thank you for your advice sir. its funny you say that cause i intended on rounding that corner off but i cut my stitch groove without thinking about it so i just left it alone. i didnt have a big enough piece of the black elephant to make my betl tunnel or i wouldve done as you said. putting my overlay on first messed up my plan a bit though. im gonna keep trying to get one perfect.

thanks to all who responded.

TRAE

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