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  • Ambassador
Posted

No it wont happen..........BUT YOU CAN LINE IT WITH THINNER LEATHER AND BURNISH THE EDGES.

Luke

  • Members
Posted

Hmmm.....there's gotta be a way!! (Gears start turning!)

Not unless you can find a cow that has its outside skin on the inside as well as the outside . . . if you see what I mean! Perhaps an inside-out cow! :huh:

When everyone is somebody, then no one's anybody

  • Members
Posted

No it wont happen..........BUT YOU CAN LINE IT WITH THINNER LEATHER AND BURNISH THE EDGES.

Luke, what an excellent idea. I would never have thought of that. Maybe we should tell Star that he can do it if he uses a floor sander to smooth it evillaugh.gifsince this is the second post I started to respond to him about, and he seems rather, uh, on the weak side of taking advice after he asks and gets it :-) If I ever ask a question, which I'll be asking tons, I want all the advice, good, bad and ugly. I really like your idea and may work that into a project, thanks.. Cheryl

  • Members
Posted (edited)

Luke, what an excellent idea. I would never have thought of that. Maybe we should tell Star that he can do it if he uses a floor sander to smooth it evillaugh.gifsince this is the second post I started to respond to him about, and he seems rather, uh, on the weak side of taking advice after he asks and gets it :-) If I ever ask a question, which I'll be asking tons, I want all the advice, good, bad and ugly. I really like your idea and may work that into a project, thanks.. Cheryl

:You_Rock_Emoticon: LMAO

Edited by oldtimer

"The gun fight at the O.K. corral was actually started by two saddlemakers sitting around a bottle of whiskey talking about saddle fitting"...

  • Members
Posted

All you have to do is burnish the back, just like you do the edges and it will be shinier than the grain side. They used to do it on English riding boots all the time, I think it's called reverse waxed calf. After riding through briars and getting the boots scratched up, you just bone them and the scratches are gone. You don't see it too much anymore because people are too lazy.

Kevin

  • Members
Posted
All you have to do is burnish the back, just like you do the edges and it will be shinier than the grain side. They used to do it on English riding boots all the time, I think it's called reverse waxed calf. After riding through briars and getting the boots scratched up, you just bone them and the scratches are gone. You don't see it too much anymore because people are too lazy.

Kevin

Kevin for us newbies, can you explain what you mean? like Bobby said he burnished the edge of a belt? and how do you 'bone' something? (I just found out what some tools like the wheely thing that was given to me a year ago do.) Thanks, Cheryl

:You_Rock_Emoticon: LMAO

Thanks, I try. innocent.gif ROFL

:You_Rock_Emoticon: LMAO

Thanks, I try. innocent.gif ROFL

  • Members
Posted

Kevin for us newbies, can you explain what you mean? like Bobby said he burnished the edge of a belt? and how do you 'bone' something? (I just found out what some tools like the wheely thing that was given to me a year ago do.) Thanks, Cheryl

See? I don't even know how I managed to get all those quotes to just keep going on and on, sigh

  • Members
Posted

I think everybody has their own method of burnishing edges, but someplace on here, Hidepounder has a tutorial that everyone seems to like. Boning is just adding wax, like parafin, and rubbing with a bone, piece of wood, piece of antler or anything smooth and hard. I don't like metal as it leaves a grey hue. To bone boots, you pretty much have to have the wooden trees in them to give you something firm to rub against, which is another reason people don't do it anymore as trees are as expensive, if not more so , than boots.

Kevin

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