TomSwede Posted August 31, 2008 Author Report Posted August 31, 2008 Thank you! So happens raven is my favourite animal and my animal token! That bike is good looking tricked out with those colours. You're talking 'bout the seat I commented the other day I guess. It'll be a killer. Now you got me thinking that a raven would be nice in there. Gotta set me up with something nice formyself in this combo with a raven or two I think. Coloruing a raven should be easy. That is one thing that actually would be perfect to just dye black. Hey, now you have inspired me, lol! Tom Quote Confucius - Better a diamond with a flaw than a pebble without. --------------------------------------------- www.1eye1.se blogg.1eye1.se
Members Gremlin Posted August 31, 2008 Members Report Posted August 31, 2008 Very nice. And that stuff you are pointing ort are not mistakes. They are experiments or chacter that is added to the work. Quote Gremlin's Custom Leather Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
ArtS Posted August 31, 2008 Report Posted August 31, 2008 Man that bike looks cool! I love it. ArtS Quote Art Schwab "You cannot teach a man anything. You can only help him discover it within himself." – Galileo Galilei
Contributing Member ClayB Posted August 31, 2008 Contributing Member Report Posted August 31, 2008 Hi Tom, Those bracers turned out really nice, just what we have all come to expect from you Just yesterday my wife and I were checking out the in progress photos of these on your blog. Cool blog and webiste, by the way! I need to figure out how to do that someday. Anyway, on the close up of the coloring, it looks to me like that is a scar on the leather, probably a healed up wound of some kind on the cow. Those things just wont take color like the rest of the leather sometimes. It's a natural thing to leather, and I dont consider them flaws, just the way it is. You did a good job of hiding it, what's left is just a reminder that it's REAL leather. Your experimentation with coloring is fun to watch and I have been learning a lot from what you are doing and sharing. Thanks!! Clay Quote ClayB Badlands Leather Art blog Badlands Leather Art Website
TomSwede Posted August 31, 2008 Author Report Posted August 31, 2008 Thanks Gremlin! I do have my bar raised high when I'm into the making of something and still learning is the same as still making mistakes so naturally figured this ones a mistake from. Might have been might not. Came out one experience richer for sure and that's allways good and hopefully someone can learn from the answers to my splotch post. Thank you ArtS...it's got two pedals........................... Thanks ClayB! I'm very glad you visit and like the blog!! When/if you're shopping for a new webhotel you should investigate if they offer a finished blog solution with the Wordpress EMU blog tool. I only filled in a online form after I got my topdomain and account activated and it was ready for posting in 5 mins. It's allmost as easy as posting here. No proggies to install or html coding or anything. I think Darryl (Sodapop) mentioned having seen US hotels carry the function aswell. My host is Swedish/European only so far. The blog is partially aimed to you guys at LW since I've been asked alot (especially with the rod tubes) to post pics undergoing working process but also for customers to view progress and provide input at certain stages. Problem for you guys is that I have to keep it more simple than I would if posting here. The blog is also good to attract those webcrawlers from the search engines. My main site is just a pic gallery made with photoshop and lowlevel html coding and carry very little amount of good search terms. So the blog is a way of swatting many flies in one stroke. Splotches, the ones I hade to the sides I dont think were scars but the smaller ones might be something like that. Nowadays the hides with scars seem to have vanished. I used to like the old ones with very sharp scars going through an area to be tooled or dyed. Those really gave character, just like the pattern on an exotic hardwood. I'll keep posting problems here and ask for help, everyone can learn from it. I often use the search engine here and look through conversations to gather info on this or that and I'm very happy that my small experiments is noticed and appreciated. I have alot of input in my jobs so it's often me who instigate the designs that sometimes require an unknown solution but seldom draw up the the tooling pattern myself so I'm very happy to come up with that Kaos design on my own with a little inspiration from Schnos logo. Tom Quote Confucius - Better a diamond with a flaw than a pebble without. --------------------------------------------- www.1eye1.se blogg.1eye1.se
Members rootbear Posted September 28, 2008 Members Report Posted September 28, 2008 HI TOM NICE WORK .ARE THESE WHAT U ARE CALLING BRACERS?I REMEMBER SEEING THESE ON COWHANDS,COWBOY CUFFS ,I WANT TO TRY AND BUILD A SET . Quote
TomSwede Posted September 28, 2008 Author Report Posted September 28, 2008 Ha ha yeah those that I do really hug the arm so maybe embracers, lol. I never know what to call, switching between armbands, bracers, cuffs. I just learnt what cowbouy cuffs are. Never noticed them before. They are really nice. So lay out a piece of white paper and draw a baseline that is 20 millimeters ( about 1/5 under one inch. I have so much trouble with inches;-) shorter than the circumference of your wrist. The circumference should be measured at the narrowest point towards your hand and over that protruding bone (the joint). Draw a 90degree line up from the center to the desired height of your bracer (5" or so for this one portrayed here). Now from the baseline draw up the sides but tilt them outward a bit and make them from 2/4 to 2/3 in the length of the height to the front top. The tilt is to accommodate the arm getting thicker. So now that you got those lines all you need is to close the sides to the center line and your setup with a rooftop bracer like this one. Save that paper and experiment with the tilted sides to see what you like and more importantly, what your friends like;-) When you have a shape you like you can make out different armsizes on it and draw on alternative tops in different colours and you have a pettern htat will be very helpful to you. I used my pattern for about 7-8 years now and love it. Just lay it on top of the leather and use a needle to mak out the connecting dots to the leather and then just cut after those with a utility knife and ruler. Piece of cake. Thanks for the appreciation and good luck!! Tom Quote Confucius - Better a diamond with a flaw than a pebble without. --------------------------------------------- www.1eye1.se blogg.1eye1.se
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