Members mrtreat32 Posted August 4, 2014 Members Report Posted August 4, 2014 My technique is nearly identical to the first video (I learned from an ex-Hermes employee). It is not casted. And yes, it leaves somewhat flatter stitches on the back. As I understand it, some years ago Hermes switched to pricking bags on both sides to ensure angled stitching on the backside as well as the front. Yeah thats interesting. I have been going between not casting and casting the stitch but haven't yet tried pricking items on both sides. Do you need a inverse pricking iron for the back? Seems like the holes would get real big if punching both sides but Im gonna give it a shot on some scrap leather. I think they cast the stitch sometimes on certain items and other times they don't. I wish I knew what determined if they did it or not to get a sense of the difference. You can see here at 50seconds in they are casting the stitch. Awesome movie btw http://www.lesmainsdhermes.com/en/film Quote
Members DavidL Posted August 4, 2014 Author Members Report Posted August 4, 2014 (edited) I hit it with the same iron and match it up, if done correctly the you won't be able to recognize which side was stitched from the front or back. I could be wrong but I believe that he didn't cast the thread/ throw the loop since he went went forward instead of backwards so the threads aren't tangled together. I wonder if hermes does cast the thread, but most items I seen look like they don't have a cast. Edited August 4, 2014 by DavidL Quote
Members mrtreat32 Posted August 6, 2014 Members Report Posted August 6, 2014 I hit it with the same iron and match it up, if done correctly the you won't be able to recognize which side was stitched from the front or back. I could be wrong but I believe that he didn't cast the thread/ throw the loop since he went went forward instead of backwards so the threads aren't tangled together. I wonder if hermes does cast the thread, but most items I seen look like they don't have a cast. To me it looks like he is looping the left side over the right. I think there are other clips in the movie where you see them doing it as well. I tried briefly hitting a sample piece of leather on both sides and the results were pretty good but its strange because by doing that with the same iron you are putting 2 different angles into the leather /////// \\\\\\\\\\ to create a xxxxxx. After I read that you do that I tried something different altogether. I made the usual marks with the pricking iron on one side but instead of stabbing the awl through the front I did it on the reverse side which kept the slants going in one direction but made clean holes on both sides. The results were similar to pricking both sides but I kept the single direction of the slant. The back of the leather when I use the traditional method comes out decent but the act of punching through and using a awl pushes the back side out a tiny bit not allowing the stitching to lay perfectly flat or even. Quote
Members whipstitchwallets Posted August 6, 2014 Members Report Posted August 6, 2014 To me it looks like he is looping the left side over the right. I think there are other clips in the movie where you see them doing it as well. I tried briefly hitting a sample piece of leather on both sides and the results were pretty good but its strange because by doing that with the same iron you are putting 2 different angles into the leather /////// \\\\\\\\\\ to create a xxxxxx. Hey Mr. treat, What you describe above is how I settled on doing mine; it simply seems to work best for me. Check out this Hermes wallet: http://www.luxuryexchange.com/shop/hermes/authentic-hermes-epsom-wallet-new/prod_3061.html Look at the direction of the slant on the inside bottom left. Now compare to the closed front bottom row (the same row other side). To me it seems they are in opposite directions (the xxxxx as you mentioned). If I'm wrong and the opposite is true, I think this still answers your question lol Best Joe Quote
Members mrtreat32 Posted August 6, 2014 Members Report Posted August 6, 2014 Hey Mr. treat, What you describe above is how I settled on doing mine; it simply seems to work best for me. Check out this Hermes wallet: http://www.luxuryexchange.com/shop/hermes/authentic-hermes-epsom-wallet-new/prod_3061.html Look at the direction of the slant on the inside bottom left. Now compare to the closed front bottom row (the same row other side). To me it seems they are in opposite directions (the xxxxx as you mentioned). If I'm wrong and the opposite is true, I think this still answers your question lol Best Joe Im looking at the main picture and I see the slants going in opposite directions but we don't know what side they went through since that is a different piece of leather. Maybe Im looking at the wrong part But they do sell reverse pricking irons with teeth going the opposite way. Which could be what you are describing. You can do different parts of whatever project with the 2 different irons to create a different look with the stitching http://www.fineleatherworking.com/leather-tools/portmanteau-pricking-irons If your stitching looks good with how you are doing it than I would keep at it but I think if they were to punch both sides they would use a standard pricing iron and than a reverse so that the holes lined up perfectly. Honestly there are so many different techniques and ways of stitching leather goods that it seems almost endless but Im always trying to improve so I find this conversation very interesting and look forward to experimenting with different methods. Quote
Members DavidL Posted August 6, 2014 Author Members Report Posted August 6, 2014 I believe that isn't how the inverse iron is used. Its used traditionally so the corners instead of the last stitch going to the top of the hole it ends up at the bottom making a cleaner corner. Perhaps hermes uses the inverse? instead of the same iron on both sides. With the different angles the back stitch sits angled like the front so It works well. For some reason with a single angle the back side is consistent but angled at 15 degrees. Quote
Contributing Member JLSleather Posted August 7, 2014 Contributing Member Report Posted August 7, 2014 Casting? Throwing? Okay, seriously .. is this some kind of "alternative lifestyle" thing I'm not privy to? Hmmm? Quote "Observation is 9/10 of the law." IF what you do is something that ANYBODY can do, then don't be surprised when ANYBODY does.
Members whipstitchwallets Posted August 7, 2014 Members Report Posted August 7, 2014 Im looking at the main picture and I see the slants going in opposite directions but we don't know what side they went through since that is a different piece of leather. Maybe Im looking at the wrong part But they do sell reverse pricking irons with teeth going the opposite way. Which could be what you are describing. You can do different parts of whatever project with the 2 different irons to create a different look with the stitching http://www.fineleatherworking.com/leather-tools/portmanteau-pricking-irons If your stitching looks good with how you are doing it than I would keep at it but I think if they were to punch both sides they would use a standard pricing iron and than a reverse so that the holes lined up perfectly. Honestly there are so many different techniques and ways of stitching leather goods that it seems almost endless but Im always trying to improve so I find this conversation very interesting and look forward to experimenting with different methods. Hey, I meant compare the main picture to the second picture. You can see both sides (front and back/inside) of the same stitch line and they look like they are going opposite directions. Quote
Members mrtreat32 Posted August 7, 2014 Members Report Posted August 7, 2014 Hey, I meant compare the main picture to the second picture. You can see both sides (front and back/inside) of the same stitch line and they look like they are going opposite directions. :dunno:I Its possible thats what they do. I just imagine that if you punch ////// and than \\\\\\ you're creating a round hole in the center where they meet. I dunno. haha. too many possibilities! Also we need pics in here! I want to see the results everyone is getting. Its not that I don't think it works but if the results are pretty amazing I may convert to punching both sides! Quote
Members DavidL Posted August 7, 2014 Author Members Report Posted August 7, 2014 Not sure which is front or back side.. Also easier since the hit from the iron on the backside makes sure that there aren't any blowout holes, just even impressions that the awl can slide through. Quote
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