Members BHPshooter Posted August 21, 2014 Members Report Posted August 21, 2014 I attempted to make my first two-tone holster recently, and I'm not sure why it turned out like this. My construction process has always been to glue, stitch, mold, then dye and finish, but two-tone finishes are impossible that way. This is the first time that I have dyed the pieces first, and then glued, stitched, etc. When I got the holster wet to do the molding, it darkened. I expected that to happen, but what I didn't expect is that it didn't completely lighten when it dried. The "wings" sort of returned to the proper shade, but the pocket didn't... For those of you who dye the leather before molding, is this normal? Or is it something particular to that color, maybe? The mouth reinforcement piece is Angelus Pro Oil Black, and the body is Fiebing's Pro Oil Saddle Tan. Luckily, this holster is for me. It's still functional, and I can live with the blemish... but I really want to figure this out before I offer two-tone finishes to customers. If anyone can offer any help, I'd greatly appreciate it.Wes Quote
Members BHPshooter Posted August 21, 2014 Author Members Report Posted August 21, 2014 The Resolene actually seems to have made it look a little bit better. This is what it looked like before the resolene: This is the kind of result I usually get from this color (center): Quote
Members Abram Posted August 21, 2014 Members Report Posted August 21, 2014 It is hard to say. I make two tone holster and dye them before I stitch them together. I have had them do that and I use Alcohol based dyes so I don't think it is the dye. I attributed it to the leather and stretching the fibers but I have only had on holster do that so my experience is limited. If you have any of that leather levft over you might take some small pieces and conduct a test to try and ron out the cause. Quote
Members Steven Kelley Posted August 21, 2014 Members Report Posted August 21, 2014 I've had the same issue using Fiebing's Pro Oil brown's. The Fiebing's Pro oil will penetrate completely through the leather very quickly. The leather around the gun will stretch and/or compress during molding. It seems like the movement causes the dye discoloration, since there is so much dye in the leather. I've had much better luck using Angelus dyes. They do not penetrate as deeply, if you just give them a quick dip. Since there isn't as much dye in the leather, it does not discolor under compression/stretching. At least that's my take on the problem. I have not had any issue since switching to Angelus from Fiebing's Pro oil. I still use the pro oil for black, but nothing else. Quote
Members shtoink Posted August 21, 2014 Members Report Posted August 21, 2014 I will preface this by saying that I have very little first hand experience, so take this with the typical amount of salt. I am just tossing out an idea and it will ultimately need testing. It is my understanding that guys that make holsters regularly and do the fading effect also have an airbrush or worked out the necessary steps to get the desired look if they don't have an airbrush. With an airbrush, you can do all your molding and shaping to your holster parts and then apply layers of dye to achieve the desired look near the end. It's doable without an airbrush, but requires a bit of planning and may involve getting your holster near the finished stages so that any molding and shaping do not interfere with the look you have going on. I think that the airbrush method probably has the most flexibility in color blending, but each method will have a learning curve. You can do some digging around in here for airbrush specific topics dealing with holster making to see if that might be the direction you want to go. I've seen some pretty impressive stuff from both methods, so an airbrush isn't a requirement by any means. Patience, planning, and testing are, however. If you choose to get an airbrush, Art has made several posts on a comparison between top end and import airbrushes, specifically the Veda WD 180. I hope this helps you get on track with what you had planned. As I said earlier, this isn't first hand knowledge, but rather information that was gathered from reading thread after thread in here. Quote
Members dickf Posted August 22, 2014 Members Report Posted August 22, 2014 I've had the same issue using Fiebing's Pro Oil brown's. The Fiebing's Pro oil will penetrate completely through the leather very quickly. The leather around the gun will stretch and/or compress during molding. It seems like the movement causes the dye discoloration, since there is so much dye in the leather. I've had much better luck using Angelus dyes. They do not penetrate as deeply, if you just give them a quick dip. Since there isn't as much dye in the leather, it does not discolor under compression/stretching. At least that's my take on the problem. I have not had any issue since switching to Angelus from Fiebing's Pro oil. I still use the pro oil for black, but nothing else. Add me to the list, too. Fiebing's Pro Oil Tan did this once, then I threw out the bottle. Angelus dyes will not do this. It's most certainly the dye, not the procedure. Quote US GUNLEATHER www.usgunleather.com twitter.com/usgunleather facebook.com/USGUNLEATHER
Members Steven Kelley Posted August 22, 2014 Members Report Posted August 22, 2014 (edited) Add me to the list, too. Fiebing's Pro Oil Tan did this once, then I threw out the bottle. Angelus dyes will not do this. It's most certainly the dye, not the procedure. I dip dye everything, but I have had limited luck air brushing the pro oil, with just a very light coat, but still had the blotchy spots 50% of the time. The Angelus dyes are night and day better at giving an even color regardless of whether you dye first of dye after forming, at least in my experience. Edited August 22, 2014 by Steven Kelley Quote
Contributing Member JLSleather Posted August 23, 2014 Contributing Member Report Posted August 23, 2014 (edited) I got one of these recently too. Same saddle tan dye. When it dried, the color was slightly different EVERYWHERE GLUE WAS applied. I don't know if it's the glue that caused it, but I've NEVER had that issue before. Since we both used that dye before, and now have the same issue in the same week, bad batch of dye? I'm not subscribing to the Fiebing's dye is no good club, because I've used it for years and never had this issue. Also not signing up for the "use an airbrush" list. I have several airbrushes, and I think I know what I'm doing with them. Still DIP dyeing has been done with these dyes for YEARS with no uneven color problems. Not that it has anything to do with the current issue, but since it was brought up, I personally think that buying an airbrush just to "do a fade" (meaning close yer eyes and blast close to the edge) is like buying a Porsche to go get groceries. I'll probably get away with dyeing this holster solid black.. we'll see (I really do NOT think it's the leather). Meanwhile, this is airbrush 101 (basic step 1 type). Something less than this is .. well.. something less. Oh, in case nobody recognizes it, that rose is an old, old, old craftaid design. I don't own the craftaid, but we though the picture was nice, so... no tooling.. airbrushed Fiebing's dye ONLY. Edited August 23, 2014 by JLSleather 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 Shooter McGavin Posted August 23, 2014 Members Report Posted August 23, 2014 I have a mahogany holster right now with the same issue. I use W&C saddle skirting and dip dye in a 50% Fiebings Pro Oil/ 50% Denatured Alcohol solution. I leave in piece in the dunk for about 30 seconds then work the color in with my hands until nothing wet remains on the surface. Saddle Tan, Light Brown, Dark Brown, and Mahogany will all do this to some degree or another. I hate that the Angelus dye comes in such a small mouthed bottle. I have trouble getting the dauber in there without making a mess. Quote Zlogonje Gunleathers
Members BHPshooter Posted August 23, 2014 Author Members Report Posted August 23, 2014 Thanks very much for all of the feedback, folks. I really appreciate it. I've had the same issue using Fiebing's Pro Oil brown's. The Fiebing's Pro oil will penetrate completely through the leather very quickly. The leather around the gun will stretch and/or compress during molding. It seems like the movement causes the dye discoloration, since there is so much dye in the leather. I've had much better luck using Angelus dyes. They do not penetrate as deeply, if you just give them a quick dip. Since there isn't as much dye in the leather, it does not discolor under compression/stretching. At least that's my take on the problem. I have not had any issue since switching to Angelus from Fiebing's Pro oil. I still use the pro oil for black, but nothing else. Add me to the list, too. Fiebing's Pro Oil Tan did this once, then I threw out the bottle. Angelus dyes will not do this. It's most certainly the dye, not the procedure. I dip dye everything, but I have had limited luck air brushing the pro oil, with just a very light coat, but still had the blotchy spots 50% of the time. The Angelus dyes are night and day better at giving an even color regardless of whether you dye first of dye after forming, at least in my experience. I agree, I have had much less frustration with Angelus products. I have already switched over to Angelus dyes almost exclusively -- with the exception of this one Fiebing's dye, because I liked the color so much. However, this kind of throws a big wrench in the works. Looks like I'll be replacing that color with the Angelus equivalent. I got one of these recently too. Same saddle tan dye. When it dried, the color was slightly different EVERYWHERE GLUE WAS applied. I don't know if it's the glue that caused it, but I've NEVER had that issue before. Since we both used that dye before, and now have the same issue in the same week, bad batch of dye? I've had this bottle for about a year and a half, so I doubt they're from the same batch. After this mess, I dyed a couple of scraps to mess around with, and it seems to be the water that causes the discoloration. If I had to guess, the areas that are glued don't let the water penetrate the leather as readily, which might explain why those areas don't discolor as badly. Quote
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