Members hestes Posted September 12, 2013 Members Report Posted September 12, 2013 Hey, all! I want to first say that I love this forum. I have found so much great information on making nice holsters that I am actually starting to sell a few holsters locally and online! Thank you all for the help! I do have a question about dry time. How long do you let your holsters dry after you take them out of the oven/dry box before you oil (or seal them if you don't oil) them? And for those of you that oil them, how long do you let that sit before you seal it? I want to get the process down to be as efficient as I can in order to cut down on my turn around time. Right now, I'm waiting about 24 hours between wet molding and oiling and another 24 before sealing. Part of that is due to my regular day job, but if I could cut that down I could get a couple more out on the weekends. Thanks in advance! Quote
Members Dwight Posted September 13, 2013 Members Report Posted September 13, 2013 Looks to me like you are doing it right. That is more or less my process, . . . 24 hours. You also mention an oven/dry box, . . . and there was a thread on here a few months back, . . . I glanced at it, . . . but didn't get involved because I don't use anything but a fan and the sun (wood stove in the winter). One of the things I hope you don't find out the hard way, . . . but dyeing a holster while there is still excess moisture is a recipe for spotty, . . . blanched, . . . ugly junk that goes into the "I should have known better" bin and the profit takes a serious hit. Same for the oil, has been my experience. May God bless, Dwight Quote If you can breathe, . . . thank God. If you can read, . . . thank a teacher. If you are reading this in English, . . . thank a veteran. www.dwightsgunleather.com
Members hestes Posted September 13, 2013 Author Members Report Posted September 13, 2013 Thanks, Dwight. I dye my leather before I wet mold so dying wet leather hasn't been an issue for me. Quote
mlapaglia Posted September 13, 2013 Report Posted September 13, 2013 Over night up to 24 hours Quote The key to immortality is first living a life worth remembering. Bruce Lee
Members Jumpout Posted September 13, 2013 Members Report Posted September 13, 2013 I don't use the oven or a dry box, and I let mine dry overnight. Quote
Members katsass Posted September 13, 2013 Members Report Posted September 13, 2013 From the grumpy old guy; Do as you're doing now, and don't worry about your turn around time, BUT, as to turn around time, I tell my customers that their holster will be ready in 'about' 30 days. That way when it is done in two weeks, they're tickled pink --- if done in under 30 days, they are happy ---- if done in around 30 days, they expect it -- and if I go over a couple of days it's still within a reasonable time element. After all, I just may want to go fishing AND, nobody expects an old fart to do ANYTHING in a hurry. There some things that just can't be sped up without the quality suffering -- make sure that a questioning customer knows that. 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 hestes Posted September 13, 2013 Author Members Report Posted September 13, 2013 Thanks for the feedback! Katsass, you are right. I don't want the quality to suffer at all Quote
Members Red Cent Posted September 13, 2013 Members Report Posted September 13, 2013 I was always told never submit leather to heat for drying. Were they wrong? Quote https://www.facebook.com/redcentcustomleather?ref=bookmarks http://www.redcentcustomleather.com/
mlapaglia Posted September 13, 2013 Report Posted September 13, 2013 Depends on the leather the temp and how long.. Take a lightly moist holster put it in 125-135 deg oven for 15-20 minutes, until it gets about 125 degs. It gets really hard and holds its shape. The collagen in the leather melts and then hardens to the new shape of the holster. Makes it real firm. If you put leather in boiling water it gets like armor. In fact thats how they made leather armor in the old days. So it all depends on why you are doing it. I have destroyed a few pieces by not watching it and it got too hot and burned. So always be careful. Quote The key to immortality is first living a life worth remembering. Bruce Lee
Members katsass Posted September 14, 2013 Members Report Posted September 14, 2013 (edited) Red Cent: I have no idea what your weather is like in North Carolina --- other than to imagine that it's humid --- however, I believe that most folks don't realize how warm the ground can be on a summer's day. Get hold of one of those laser dot temp gages that reads surface temps (don't go buy one of the damned things - bum it off a buddy) and check the ground surface temp in an area that has some hours of uninterrupted sunlight on it -- it can easily exceed 120 degrees on concrete, blacktop, gravel, etc. Place your soggy masterpiece slightly above the (hot) concrete, macadam, blacktop or whatever you want to call the warm surface (use a small box, a thick book (previously read), or anything that elevates it slightly above the warm (maybe hot) surface, and allow old Ma Nature to smile on it for a while, turning it once. In colder climes one can face a small space heater (set on low) into an open box with your treasure nestled inside. The thing is to warm the dead cow skin enough to allow evaporation to take place and allow that moisture to escape the area surrounding your work, BUT in so doing, never allow the leather to exceed about 135 degrees. I don't recommend the use of a standard oven for drying -- it's to damned difficult to hold your temp to a reasonable level and the moisture has a somewhat difficult time escaping. Mlapaglia has it down well. In my experience, most folks want to hurry the wet molding process so that they can see and show others their masterpiece just a bit sooner than they should. Their work suffers from that 'hurry up' mindset IMO. Mike Edited September 14, 2013 by katsass 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.
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