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Posted

Hey guys,

This has probably been answered several times over here, but I didn't have much luck searching the forum, so I thought I'd ask.

Anyways, I began my very first leather project the other day, a new belt.

I started with a raw Tandy blank and was able to get it tooled to my liking, and then I stained it with some Eco Flow Pro Waterstain. Here's where I ran into a problem: After the stain dried for about 8 hours, the belt was extremely stiff. I didn't think much of it at the time, given it was my first piece, but while I was inspecting it, I realized that anywhere I'd bent the leather, the top surface wrinkled. No cracks or anything - just a wavy, wrinkled surface. I didn't bother finishing the piece because I know I'll have to start over - I did try adding some olive oil, though, to see if that made a difference. Not much luck

So for next time, I'm curious what I did wrong. What gives? Do I need to condition the hell out of the leather here at some stage here prior to moving it at all? Bad leather?

Hope you guys can give me some tips! Photo attached.

Thanks.

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Posted

It's probably crappy leather.

If you buy Hermann Oak blanks, tool, oil and dye then that shouldn't happen.

  • Members
Posted

I've had belly leather do that when I tried to use it for something. Conditioning helps. But it won't make bad leather good leather. Head over to the Springfield leather website and look at their blanks.

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Posted
  On 1/27/2014 at 2:17 AM, Tree Reaper said:

It's probably crappy leather.

If you buy Hermann Oak blanks, tool, oil and dye then that shouldn't happen.

I ended up ordering a couple blanks of Hermann Oak veg - and for cheaper than the Tandys! Hopefully this set turns out much better :)

Thanks for the suggestions guys!

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Posted

I agree with what has been said. It's the Tandy leather and the ecoflow stuff. Call Springfield leather and get a belt blank from them, Use regular oil dye to dye it and then use something like Bag or Tan Kote to finish it with and you will do fine.

RC

Randy Cornelius

Cornelius Saddlery

LaCygne, Kansas

Randy & Riley Cornelius

Ride Hard, Shoot Fast and Always Tell the Truth...

Posted

I buy my blanks from Springfield as well, you'll like what you get and the results they produce.

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Posted

As has been said crappy leather. The Tandy blanks are cut from bellies. Belly leather will stretch and some times you will get kind of a delaminating or loosening of the grain of the top surface giving you the wrinkles. The blanks Springfield Leather sells are Herman Oak cut from backs. These are excellent blanks and I have made many belts using them. They are about the same price or for the quality you could say they are cheaper as they will outlast the tandy ones.

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