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Posted

If I wanted a machine-type stitch (thin thread and small stitch) but had to do it by hand because I didn't have a leather sewing machine, how would I go about that?

What's the strongest thread to go for at that size? I'll be using thread the same colour as the leather to help hide it, but I was just wondering how thin thread goes, while still being strong enough for leather products.

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Posted

Confused. When you say leather sewing machine, is that for really thick stuff? I have a machine but I do not use thin thread and not a real small stitch. I use 277 on top and 207 in the bobbin. Look up the size and see if is what you mean.

I use bonded polyester thread.

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Posted

If I'm not using my standard 346 thread, . . . the only other one I use at all goes on my other sewing machine, . . . I buy it at JoAnn fabrics, . . . it is called upholstery thread in their store.

It is one strong thread, . . . would do wonderfully for smaller stitches (I do 5 spi with the big machine, . . . about 8 spi with the upholstery thread) if you are sewing by hand.

May God bless,

Dwight

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Posted (edited)

Sorry to confuse, Red Cent, just a symptom of me being new to all this. I wasn't suggesting leather sewing machines only do small stitches, but that I am hoping to acheive the kind of small stitch that is usually associated with mass-produced, machine-stitched leather goods.

Dwight, thanks very much, I've had a look at some of that upholstery thread at Joann fabrics and I think this is the kind of thing I'm after. Luckily I think my mum has a big bobbin of this stuff, but I just wasn't sure it would be strong enough.

Just to clarify, this is the kind of stitch I'm wanting to achieve

Personalised-Printed-Melbourne-Nappa-Lea

Thanks again to you both.

Edited by OurJud
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Posted

How do you plan on punching your holes to hand stitch with that small of a thread? You might have to work an awl blade down super small; otherwise you're going to wind up with awl holes much much bigger than your thread and it will look bad. Also, finding a stitch marker that small (13-14 spi?) is gonna be tough. Just a few thoughts.

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Posted

OurJud,

I sometimes do 12 or 14 spi. I use 0.4mm Tiger thread and the awl I use is a sharpened (to approximately diamond-shaped) size 3 needle. For needles I use In-betweens. As you're in the UK, Abbey do the thread and the needles. you have to do the awl blade yourself. It's a pain that small and tight.

Gary

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Posted

One source for stitch markings might be a hacksaw blade. Many of them have 12 teeth per inch, . . . and other derivitives.

A short piece, . . . maybe 1 inch long, . . . could be affixed to a wooden dowel, . . . and used to mark the stitch placement.

Sometimes you gotta be creative, . . .

May God bless,

Dwight

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Posted (edited)

Thanks everyone - why are things that are worth doing never easy?? Can anyone answer me that? :unsure:

Gary, what do you use to push your sharpened needle through your leather, a thimble?

Just to pick up on a few more points - sorry if I miss you:

Chris, you ask a good question regarding punching the holes. Typically for me I hadn't thought that far ahead.

gary, I didn't realise Tiger thread came as thin as 0.4mm. I bought some from Ian Atkinson's etsy store last week and opted for the smallest he was offering (0.8mm). I presumed this was as thin as TT came.

Dwight, I like the idea of using a saw blade to mark my stitch holes. I shall investigate further.

Edited by OurJud
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Posted

My apologies, it's Ritza, not Tiger - see http://abbeyengland.com/Store/tabid/77/txtSearch/thread/catpageindex/ProductID/68932/language/en-GB/Default.aspx

You can do 12spi with 0.8mm but it will look a bit clunky (IMO).

You use the sharpened needle as an awl blade and fit it into an awl handle. That sort of answers Chris' question too.

Hope that helps.

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Posted

Thanks, gary.

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Posted

You can find small stitch marker wheels in fabric stores, my mum uses one for some of the hand stitching she does on her quilts.

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Posted

Thanks, cem.

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