JoeSnuffie Report post Posted February 17, 2014 I made this a couple days ago. It's a letter stamp jig and could probably be modified to work with most stamps. It's working great for me. Since the materials are cheap and easy to drill, someone with more talent than I have could probably make jigs for letters on a curve or in a circle. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Tree Reaper Report post Posted February 17, 2014 Joe; I've been working on a prototype that would allow you to use the "I" in your words. It's just a 1/2 inch groove with a 5/8 counter bore that will accommodate 7-8 letters. I put it in the shop press and give it 1/2 ton worth of pressure. Kevin. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
JoeSnuffie Report post Posted February 17, 2014 Kevin, I really like that. I'll have to give that a try, too. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Tree Reaper Report post Posted February 17, 2014 It can be made fairly quickly, I think this wooden one I made took about twenty minutes on the router table. If I was using it a lot I would have one machined out of metal but with the wood I can make a strip three feet long and just cut a new one if I needed it. Here's an end view ... Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
veedub3 Report post Posted February 17, 2014 It can be made fairly quickly, I think this wooden one I made took about twenty minutes on the router table. If I was using it a lot I would have one machined out of metal but with the wood I can make a strip three feet long and just cut a new one if I needed it. Here's an end view ... Great idea. I have been meaning to sit down to come up with a way to do this but just haven't found the time. I think this will make it super easy. I can put this on the router table and have it knocked out in minutes. Thanks for sharing, Karina Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Tree Reaper Report post Posted February 17, 2014 The only thing I didn't mention is the 1/2 inch router bit is a half a hair too large to get a friction fit so when I inverted the stamp to place it on the leather the individual stamps would have fallen out so to keep them secure I used rubber cement in the groove of the jig and it did the trick. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
BDAZ Report post Posted February 17, 2014 I made this a couple days ago. It's a letter stamp jig and could probably be modified to work with most stamps. It's working great for me. Since the materials are cheap and easy to drill, someone with more talent than I have could probably make jigs for letters on a curve or in a circle. Freakin Brilliant! Since all my names are vertical, the I is always a bear. I am getting it perfect now but with lots of effort. Your way I can have all the letters pressed tight and aligned, then tap an initial impression or maybe use a steel bar on the arbor press, then go back and arbor each individual letter. I'm going to do some testing later toda. Thanks! Bob Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
stelmackr Report post Posted March 16, 2021 Corrected link to article. Had some issues with internet. That article on Tutorial--Typography in Leather has been moved to: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1qgV6aH_FkHa5lBX_kNceroW2elQju_XW/view Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites