Members tanda4 Posted January 5, 2014 Members Report Posted January 5, 2014 So frustrating at times. Still haven't completed a full project. There is always something that I screw up. Quote
Members jackd942 Posted January 5, 2014 Members Report Posted January 5, 2014 I never think about giving up...there are no such things as failures, you have just figured out ways NOT to do something:) just don't repeat it... Quote http://DavisLeather.blogspot.com http://Facebook.com/DavisCustomLeather
electrathon Posted January 5, 2014 Report Posted January 5, 2014 I recomend smaller projects. There is a shorter learning curve that way and less frustrating if things go bad. Aaron Quote
Members Dwight Posted January 6, 2014 Members Report Posted January 6, 2014 I don't remember the number of experiments Thomas Edison did before he succeeded with the electric light bulb, . . . but it was a bunch. The success at the end of the line, . . . erased the failures. Nobody in history class moans or complains about how badly #17 went, . . . or the problems with #35, . . . or the technical obstacles that ended #56, . . . they only remember the last one, . . . as they flip the switch and the light comes on. No matter how bad the screw up, . . . something can be learned from it, . . . or, . . . in some "leather" projects, . . . the original idea can be abandoned, . . . and the pieces used for a different project. I've done that with holsters, . . . and belts. I've even got a holster in my drawer, . . . waiting for a customer. I started making it, . . . got it in the 90% done stage, . . . when I realized my customer was left handed, . . . and I had created a right hand holster. Hang in there. 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 TomG Posted January 6, 2014 Members Report Posted January 6, 2014 Ditto on what Aaron and Dwight said. Especially the one about smaller projects. Make a single coaster. A key fob. Something you can do in an hour or so. It will give you the sense of accomplishment and ease the frustration Quote Tom Gregory Legacy Leathercraft www.legacyleathercraft.com www.etsy.com/shop/legacyleathercraft
Members humperdingle Posted January 6, 2014 Members Report Posted January 6, 2014 So frustrating at times. Still haven't completed a full project. There is always something that I screw up. What kind of things have you been making? Quote
Members WScott Posted January 6, 2014 Members Report Posted January 6, 2014 Take a break for a bit, do some reading and watch some technique videos....there is so much info at your fingertips here and you tube. If you are more specific with your troubles and post some photos I guarantee you will get help from the members here. Hang in there, we all have those days Quote
Members Cyberthrasher Posted January 6, 2014 Members Report Posted January 6, 2014 I get irritated and walk away quite regularly, but never think of giving up. You HAVE to look at every screw up as a lesson. Analyze it, figure out what went wrong, figure out what needs to be done to keep it from happening again. It's obvious you strive for perfection, otherwise you wouldn't be asking this, but you do need to learn to use it. It's good you don't want to put out crap, so fix one thing at a time and perfect it until the whole isn't crap. Quote hellhoundkustoms.wordpress.com www.facebook.com/hellhoundkustoms www.etsy.com/shop/HellhoundKustoms
Members chiefjason Posted January 6, 2014 Members Report Posted January 6, 2014 My FIL gave me some great advice years ago. He told me craftsmen aren't perfect and don't make all perfect projects. They have learned how to fix their mistakes so you don't see them. It drives me nuts when I let something get out that isn't right. Sometimes it's me, sometimes it's materials. Drives me nuts though. I'm currently rebuilding a holster for an SP101 2.25" barrel after the customer received a beautiful new holster for a 3" barrel. Doh! Told him to carry it till the new one arrived. I'll loose money on this one but probably get another one down the road for making it right. Then there is the box of miss cut leather in the garage, the burnt kydex, the 75% finished piece that was just wrong, the belt that was too short because the guy swore he was a 34". It happens. Re think the project, do more research on how to do it, then come back to it. Or maybe just work through the mistake and finish it. You will learn plenty in the finishing to carry over to the next one. Quote
Members veedub3 Posted January 6, 2014 Members Report Posted January 6, 2014 My shop has plenty of half completed projects and mistakes - but as stated before quitting never enters my mind. I have only been doing this for 13 months. I am bound to make a mistake daily. But what I have learned is NOT to make the same mistake again, and how to turn that mistake into a different product. I finished a iPad sleeve just yesterday and I went to put my mark on the flap and I stamped it upside down. The stamp was a brass stamp that is clearly marked showing the direction and because I was not paying attention and distracted, I stamped it upside down anyway. Now I couldn't send that one to the customer so I cut the flap down and added a strap closer instead and listed it for sale. The lesson I learned from that mistake was to kick your freeloading, always begging for a bag sister out of the shop when working on customers orders. Karina Quote "The only man who makes no mistake, is the man who does nothing." Theodore Roosevelt
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