Jump to content

stiching holes  

109 members have voted

  1. 1. make holes in leather BEFORE the actual stich is made?

    • use your awl to punture all stitchin holes first.
    • use your awl to make the holes as you stitch.


Recommended Posts

  • Members
Posted

David, I think I've only seen one example of something you've made, but that dopp kit looks really cool. I'd like to see more of what you're making. But yes, you need a better camera. Even a phone camera in good lighting would be better than that.

  • Replies 47
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

  • Members
Posted

Thanks.

I should be uploading more projects onto this site. A lot of my time is spent practicing so theres a lot of leather squares with lines of stitching or prototypes. Usually the pictures on my samsung s3 are good but these came out faded.

  • Members
Posted

I usually work with heavy leather in the 8-9 ounce weight so I personally like to use my pricking irons to punch all the holes before stitching. I've tried using the awl to punch as I go and just don't care for it. I use different size irons and threads depending on what i'm working on, the thickness of the leather and the look I'm going after. A lot of times I like to use thicker thread as it helps to show that what you are looking at is all stitched by hand. It really gives the piece the done by hand look. I use a compass to mark my stitching line because I hate stitches that wonder all over the place and found it's next to impossible to keep things neat without laying down a guideline before punching holes.

One problem I had with pre punching the holes is the iron would stretch the leather when you tried to remove it. So to keep from stretching the leather I fashioned a 1 by 6 board with a 1/4 inch slit down the center. I then lay this on the stitching line and punch the iron down through the slit and through the leather piece. The board then holds the leather down wile I pull the iron from it. First few attempts I noticed the board leaving edge marks on the leather from the edge of the wood. Gluing 2 strips of leather along the underside of the board eliminated the edge marks.

  • 2 weeks later...
  • Members
Posted (edited)

I have worked will many different thicknesses and combinations of varying thickness and only recently did I try making the holes in the leather before stitching but it was from necessity

post-19140-0-51097000-1412389060_thumb.j

post-19140-0-33973000-1412389521_thumb.j

Edited by stealfdawg
  • 2 months later...
  • Members
Posted (edited)

I have a degenerative peripheral motor nerve condition and I can't maneuver a needle and a stitching awl at the same time. I make all the stitching holes ahead of time.

First I'll either mark or groove them depending on what I consider appropriate. Then I'll mark the stitch holes with a pricking iron by puttin' it on the line and givin' it a good whack with a mallet. Then open the holes with a stitching awl.

stitchholes_zps99e2cacd.jpg

P1030013_zpsec836cef.jpg

Edited by snubbyfan

Keep on Chooglin'
Check out my YouTube Channel, comment and subscribe for updates
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOM3hbruUKHov9kquIxXKlA

  • 2 weeks later...
  • Members
Posted

Hi, everyone! I'm new on the forum, and this is one of the things I'm here for. I've been making knife sheaths out of 8-9 ounce vegtan and sewing two layers for the sheath with at least one and sometimes more layers of the same weight for a welt, contact cement in between. I've been drilling holes cuz I didn't know better (5/32") but I hate how big the holes look. I'm getting some arthritis in fingers now, and I'm wondering about using a diamond awl for saddle stitching. I'd LIKE to.

Should I be able to push an awl through that thickness, usually a half-inch, by hand? I see some of you chuck the awl into a drill press and use it just to push, turned off. I know I can do that. Thanks in advance.


I'm using a groover to make a stitch line, probably not deep enough, on the face side, and a 6spi wheel for marking the holes. Can't make them any closer since I'm drilling. On a good day, I'm pretty good about the holes going straight through. On a good day.

  • Members
Posted (edited)

Hi, everyone! I'm new on the forum, and this is one of the things I'm here for. I've been making knife sheaths out of 8-9 ounce vegtan and sewing two layers for the sheath with at least one and sometimes more layers of the same weight for a welt, contact cement in between. I've been drilling holes cuz I didn't know better (5/32") but I hate how big the holes look. I'm getting some arthritis in fingers now, and I'm wondering about using a diamond awl for saddle stitching. I'd LIKE to.

Should I be able to push an awl through that thickness, usually a half-inch, by hand? I see some of you chuck the awl into a drill press and use it just to push, turned off. I know I can do that. Thanks in advance.

I'm using a groover to make a stitch line, probably not deep enough, on the face side, and a 6spi wheel for marking the holes. Can't make them any closer since I'm drilling. On a good day, I'm pretty good about the holes going straight through. On a good day.

Just make sure the awl's sharp, polished and stropped. Also be careful of where you put your fingers on the back side, that sharp. polished, stropped awl'll go right into a finger.

I use pricking irons and give them a good whack with a mallet. That gives me an angled starter hole that helps to guide the awl.

Edited by snubbyfan

Keep on Chooglin'
Check out my YouTube Channel, comment and subscribe for updates
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOM3hbruUKHov9kquIxXKlA

  • Members
Posted

Thanks, Snubby. Guess the next thing I'm gonna do is order a couple of awls.

  • Members
Posted

what snubby said.

another thing that you can do to make sure that your awl goes in straight is to use a stitching horse. second best is a stitching pony. you can be more consistent in your awl and stitching action. also, to prevent sticking the awl into your finger on the backside, you can use a cake of beeswax or a cork to push against the needle.

your awl has to be crazy sharp. i polish mine with toothpaste after i get it to the right sharpness. and, just a little dip into a cake of beeswax with your awl before you stitch (or every third or so), really helps it to slide through the leather. it makes it so you're not working so hard.

  • Members
Posted

My wife wanted to try pokin' a few stitch holes one day. "Be careful," said I, "that's awl's sharp." First thing she did was jam it directly into her finger. "Don't get any blood on the leather!"

Keep on Chooglin'
Check out my YouTube Channel, comment and subscribe for updates
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOM3hbruUKHov9kquIxXKlA

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.


×
×
  • Create New...