Suicide Report post Posted January 19, 2012 Hi guys, I'm using upholstery cow leather offcuts to make a laces. That leather has a bit fluffy flesh side. What I have been doing so far is waxing a lace with saddle soap , give it to dry and then lace. Flesh side is glossy and slick at that moment. IHowever after awhile more and more I pull the lace through the holes, the flesh side becomes more and more fluffy again ... Is there a way to prepare such sort of laces to keep flesh side slick while braiding? I did try Gum Trag but it makes lace sticky. Thanks! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Phatdaddy Report post Posted January 19, 2012 Hi guys, I'm using upholstery cow leather offcuts to make a laces. That leather has a bit fluffy flesh side. What I have been doing so far is waxing a lace with saddle soap , give it to dry and then lace. Flesh side is glossy and slick at that moment. IHowever after awhile more and more I pull the lace through the holes, the flesh side becomes more and more fluffy again ... Is there a way to prepare such sort of laces to keep flesh side slick while braiding? I did try Gum Trag but it makes lace sticky. Thanks! Might have to try using shorter pieces of lace. Kevin Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Suicide Report post Posted January 19, 2012 Might have to try using shorter pieces of lace. Thanks for reply, Kevin. Yep, I actually thought about this. I'm using 50-70 cm splits and having them shorter might not be very handy. Mostly I am doing mexican round braid and flesh side became fluffy after about 3-4 holes forward (as the lace is going through the each hole 2 times + over/under passes in between). Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Phatdaddy Report post Posted January 19, 2012 Thanks for reply, Kevin. Yep, I actually thought about this. I'm using 50-70 cm splits and having them shorter might not be very handy. Mostly I am doing mexican round braid and flesh side became fluffy after about 3-4 holes forward (as the lace is going through the each hole 2 times + over/under passes in between). Ya that definitely isn't too long, I wasn't sure how long of a lace you were using. Not sure what you can do then. Kevin Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Sovran81 Report post Posted January 19, 2012 Have you tried splitting the strand so you start with a smoother flesh side? Also by beveling the strand the top grain extends further than the flesh and will hide the fluff better. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Suicide Report post Posted January 19, 2012 Have you tried splitting the strand so you start with a smoother flesh side? Also by beveling the strand the top grain extends further than the flesh and will hide the fluff better. No, I haven't tried splitting. I just dont have a splitter/beveller yet (Thats why I was asking you in another thread about your guidlines how to make beveler like you did ) I just wandering if there is other way to slick flesh down (hopefully forever ). Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites