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Posted

Hi everyone, i learn how to make handmade shoes and the info about how to work with leather, which i found here, helps me a lot. This is my second pair, i do everything by hand, so don't judge me too hard. I used english harris tweed alongside with the leather i bought through ebay, seller said that it is a buffalo leather, but i'm not sure, because the quality is crap.

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P.S. sorry for my english, i'm from Ukraine.

P.S. 2 i have a dream to start my own shoe line, but i need to learn a lot and to do that i started a crowdfunding project to get money and attend shoemaking courses, if anyone can help me not only with money, but maybe with a repost in social nets, that would be great.

  • Members
Posted

If I'm correct there's buffalo and buffalo - American buffalo and Indian water buffalo. First is nice but not what you need, second is just the crappy version of normal veg tan, and possibly that's what you have. Unfortunately I have no knowledge of shoe making at all but if you like a smooth surface from stacked leather I know from knife and sheath making that you need good quality, dense (for soles maybe even compressed) vegetable tanned leather that you can burnish and polish.

The shoe in your pics looks really nice :) Maybe the looks of the heel improve when you use a bar of saddle soap on it.

  • Members
Posted

Beautiful shoes, friend! May I ask how you accomplished the pinking/brogue holes? Is there a tool for that?

  • Members
Posted

I love the shoes, you clearly have been learning already, but yes the leather appears to be crap.

I eagerly plan to make my own shoes one day.

Thank you a lot, and when you'll start making your own shoes, just let me know if i can help you.

Your workmanship far exceeds the quality of that suede :) Fantastic shoes!

Thank you, but they are far away from the perfect one, i still in learning process.

If I'm correct there's buffalo and buffalo - American buffalo and Indian water buffalo. First is nice but not what you need, second is just the crappy version of normal veg tan, and possibly that's what you have. Unfortunately I have no knowledge of shoe making at all but if you like a smooth surface from stacked leather I know from knife and sheath making that you need good quality, dense (for soles maybe even compressed) vegetable tanned leather that you can burnish and polish.

The shoe in your pics looks really nice :) Maybe the looks of the heel improve when you use a bar of saddle soap on it.

I think you're right, thank you for the info.

And yes, i need to finish the sole, but i don't know how, yet. I have gum tragacanth and wax, but i'm not sure how to apply them.

Beautiful shoes, friend! May I ask how you accomplished the pinking/brogue holes? Is there a tool for that?

Thank you, i used punch tools similar to these.

  • Members
Posted

Nice! What leather did you use for the top beading? How thick was it?

For the top beading i used the same leather that i used for the lining, it was a pig leather about 1.1 mm thick, and i only strengthen it with the special tape that you can buy in a regular fabric store.

  • 4 months later...
  • Members
Posted (edited)

Your uppers look great, however, for heel building and the outsole you'll ideally want sole bend(9-10.2 iron) at around 5 to 5.5mm thick. Small single cut shoulder(5-9 iron) for the insole as it will flex a lilttle better than the bend will. Problem is that you probably have to buy the whole bend or the single bend from your source. Veg tan bend is like wood and will sand like wood. After some really fine grit sandpaper you can shelac(natural) the heel just like you would wood and sand it again with the finer 600 grit. Then move on to dying etc..

edit Where did you buy your lasts? And which model?

Edited by BespokeOnly

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