Members LeatherWerks Posted January 5, 2012 Members Report Posted January 5, 2012 (edited) I'm fairly new to leather working and have learned a lot from this forum. I recently started making holsters. I made a template for a holster but found out before I sewed it up that it was going to be too tight. On the leather I used a small pointed tool to mark where my stitch line was going to be. I moved my line out before I sewed the holster and now the gun fits fine. My problem is now, I have some small marks where I marked the first stitch line. Is there any way I can either make these marks go away or at least reduce their appearance? Steve Edited January 5, 2012 by LeatherWerks Quote
Contributing Member Ferg Posted January 5, 2012 Contributing Member Report Posted January 5, 2012 You would need to dampen the leather a little and use a modeling tool with a fairly large end. That would get most of the line. ferg I'm fairly new to leather working and have learned a lot from this forum. I recently started making holsters. I made a template for a holster but found out before I sewed it up that it was going to be too tight. On the leather I used a small pointed tool to mark my stitch line. I moved my stitch line out and now the gun fits fine. My problem is now, I have some small marks where the first stitch line was. Is there any way I can either make these marks go away or at least reduce their appearance? Steve Quote
LNLeather Posted January 5, 2012 Report Posted January 5, 2012 Hi Steve A picture of the holster would be helpful. I did something similar, and ended up adding a camouflage stamp to it and the problem was fixed. Maybe you could bevel over the area. You could try to repeat the problem on a scrap piece of leather and try out different possible solutions before you do anything to your holster... Hope this helps Quote
Tree Reaper Posted January 5, 2012 Report Posted January 5, 2012 I found that a modeling spoon will take the mark out but it leaves a matted finish on the leather and in order to hide that I had to spoon the entire work piece. Quote
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