Members JoelR Posted September 25, 2012 Members Report Posted September 25, 2012 (edited) Got a call today to do some repair work on an old broom handle mauser holster. Knowing the value of some of these old guns, I feel the need to keep everything as authentic as possible. Based on the time frame of production and the description of the damage, I assume the thread is cotton. Anyone have a recommendation as to where to get the best-of-the-best? Edited September 26, 2012 by JoelR Quote By the end of the show you start telling them you keep a few head of steers behind the house and go out and carve off a strip when you need it, it grows back in 5 or 6 weeks. - Art JR
mlapaglia Posted September 27, 2012 Report Posted September 27, 2012 I would try 5 cord Barbours linen thread. Wax it with Bees wax and give it a go. This assumes you are hand stitching it. Quote The key to immortality is first living a life worth remembering. Bruce Lee
Members katsass Posted September 27, 2012 Members Report Posted September 27, 2012 From the grumpy old guy. From my experience, those German WWII leather items, along with the Japanese, Italian, and Chinese that I have had my grubby mitts on are generally VERY dried out and actually brittle. If you try to ease an awl or even a needle through the existing holes, the leather tears out or (at the worst) breaks apart. IMO I'd leave it alone. It's better (and worth more) to have an original item in somewhat rough shape than to have an original item, damaged as the result a not-so-good repair job. JMHO Mike Quote NOTE TO SELF: Never try to hold a cat and an operating Dust buster at the same time!! At my age I find that I can live without sex..........but not without my glasses. Being old has an advantage.......nobody expects me to do anything in a hurry.
Members JoelR Posted September 27, 2012 Author Members Report Posted September 27, 2012 Thanks for the recomendation and advise. Yes, before I do the job I will first make sure the leather is pliable enough to work with, and secondly that the customer knows that doing the work may make the holster usable again, but could be detremental to any value (not that the holster adds or subtracts much from these types of collectables). Quote By the end of the show you start telling them you keep a few head of steers behind the house and go out and carve off a strip when you need it, it grows back in 5 or 6 weeks. - Art JR
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.