Tree Reaper Posted March 15, 2014 Report Posted March 15, 2014 Any ideas on how they get this edge on stingray? It looks too even to be burnished. Thanks. Kevin Quote
Members Bluesman Posted March 15, 2014 Members Report Posted March 15, 2014 Either that's not real Ray or the edges are rolled. I've used plenty of Ray and that can't be burnished to my knowledge. Quote If it ain't moving and should......WD40, If it's moving and shouldn't....Duct Tape. There you have it, now fix something
Tree Reaper Posted March 15, 2014 Author Report Posted March 15, 2014 It will burnish but not that even. I'm wondering if they used an iron on it. Are you hand stitching or machine stitching? Quote
Members Bluesman Posted March 15, 2014 Members Report Posted March 15, 2014 Machine stiching and hand stiching. You might be onto something. A hot iron may melt the calcium to give it that bead look. Quote If it ain't moving and should......WD40, If it's moving and shouldn't....Duct Tape. There you have it, now fix something
Tree Reaper Posted March 15, 2014 Author Report Posted March 15, 2014 When sewing a wallet with the machine do you have to compensate for the thickness between the wallet interiors and the 1 inch space on the wallet back? The difference between the layered interior and the thin wallet back in the center is 1/8 of an inch on the interior compared to 1/16 of an inch on the wallet back. I have an iron so I'll check the edging out on some scrap stingray. Quote
Members Bluesman Posted March 15, 2014 Members Report Posted March 15, 2014 I'm not following you. I use it for inlays. When i do that I grind down the calcium to the flesh about 3/8" around for a bond line. That gives me 3/16" of stitch line. Quote If it ain't moving and should......WD40, If it's moving and shouldn't....Duct Tape. There you have it, now fix something
Tree Reaper Posted March 15, 2014 Author Report Posted March 15, 2014 Burning the edge doesn't work, I just tried it. Where the white stitching changes to red there is a difference in thickness which can mess with the thread tension. On inlays you wouldn't have that as it stays constant. Quote
Members Bluesman Posted March 15, 2014 Members Report Posted March 15, 2014 I'd try some scrap. The difference is what 2/3 oz? I would think that even with a tighter tension you should be okay and it should ride over the thin spot. Quote If it ain't moving and should......WD40, If it's moving and shouldn't....Duct Tape. There you have it, now fix something
Tree Reaper Posted March 15, 2014 Author Report Posted March 15, 2014 (edited) It's going from 8 oz. to 4 oz. then back to 8 oz. I was stitching 7 oz. leather nicely and then tried sewing the 4 oz. on the wallet and the tension wasn't even close. After trying that three times I removed the thread and used the needle for an awl and will hand stitch this one but I'll have to play around with it for the next one. Edited March 15, 2014 by Tree Reaper Quote
Members Bluesman Posted March 15, 2014 Members Report Posted March 15, 2014 Let me know how it comes out. I have a similar project so I am interested in what you fiind out. Quote If it ain't moving and should......WD40, If it's moving and shouldn't....Duct Tape. There you have it, now fix something
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