Moderator bruce johnson Posted October 28, 2008 Moderator Report Posted October 28, 2008 Some of you on another leather list have no doubt read about this. A guy was using a jerk needle and ran it through into his waiting finger on the bottom side. He had to call some friends to get him unhooked from the saddle, and then to emergency to have the jerk needle removed from his finger. I had sent this guy one of my cantle binding helper things a few years ago. He usually used it, but didn't here. I am attaching pics of this deal. I never really liked beating up a tickler pushing a binding up, broke the awl tip occasionally on the small hammer handle, and tacks caught thread and were a pain. I made this deal up out of scrap LDPE cutting board. I cut it with a jig saw and shaped it and rounded over edges with a benchtop belt sander and a Dremel. The bottom is angled to really push up into the crease. The slot gives a place for the awl to come through without embedding into something. They really don't take long to make - 10 minutes maybe. I've done about a dozen and mostly given them away to guys who asked what "that" was on the wall. One guy has added a wrist loop to just drop it to pull thread, and flip it up into his hand to use it. Saves time picking it up. Quote Bruce Johnson Malachi 4:2 "the windshield's bigger than the mirror, somewhere west of Laramie" - Dave Stamey Vintage Refurbished And Selected New Leather Tools For Sale - www.brucejohnsonleather.com
Ambassador Don101 Posted October 28, 2008 Ambassador Report Posted October 28, 2008 Now that is a neat idea, Don Quote
Members TrooperChuck Posted December 4, 2008 Members Report Posted December 4, 2008 Wow! I never stopped to think about what would happen if one of those things went through my finger. Ouch! Thanks for the safety tip. I'm gonna make one of those things right away. Quote "Courage is being scared to death, but saddling up anyway." (John Wayne)
Members StolpSaddles Posted February 18, 2009 Members Report Posted February 18, 2009 I like it. Better than the wine cork I have been useing Quote Leather work for the fun of it http://www.stolpsaddles.com
Moderator bruce johnson Posted February 18, 2009 Author Moderator Report Posted February 18, 2009 Yeah, I like them. I have since made a narrow "single toe" model to get down into the cantle corners. I still laugh thinking about him sewing a cantle and burying the jerk needle barb through it and into his finger on the bottom. That had to be some good watching, and he seemed to have sense of humor about it. You know those stories that always start out, "You'll never believe what happened to ol'........". I ought to get him to join here, he even had the foresight to have pictures taken. Quote Bruce Johnson Malachi 4:2 "the windshield's bigger than the mirror, somewhere west of Laramie" - Dave Stamey Vintage Refurbished And Selected New Leather Tools For Sale - www.brucejohnsonleather.com
Members MT3Geiger Posted July 18, 2009 Members Report Posted July 18, 2009 My dad did this exact thing while hand stitching a sole to a welt on a pecos workboot. Wasn't paying attention to where his fingers were, as he was stitching a tricky section of toe. His method of extraction was to use the side of the workbench as a backstop while he leaned on the awl handle to push the needle through the rest of his finger & then cut the tip/barb off to pull it back out the way it came. Pretty impressive as he only had a few grunts as a response while he did it & it went through pretty much the middle of the finger. I don't know that I would have had the fortitude to do that. This stitching helper seems like a much better solution. :-) Quote
Members BondoBobCustomSaddles Posted July 19, 2009 Members Report Posted July 19, 2009 In all the years that I have been stitching cantle bindings, I have been lucky enough not to stick myself, (not to say that I have haven't stuck my self other ways!), but: I decided to try your helper tool when it came up here before, and it really works well. I made mine with a piece of hickory handle and added a thong to keep it on my wrist. That way after the needle is through, I can drop it and concentrate on the stitch. The key is that it is a real help getting the stitches the same angle and making the over all apearence uniform and straight from stitch to stitch. I hate to see nicely made saddles where the maker took a short cut to stitching the cantle. It just kills the look of a good saddle. Bondo Bob Quote
Members SecondChances Posted July 18, 2013 Members Report Posted July 18, 2013 The photos no longer work. I am looking to repair the stitching on the cantle of an older model Western saddle where it has come undone. I am assuming this tool would be helpful for this particular task? If not, is there someone knowledgable in this subject matter who would be so kind as provide me with guidance? Quote
Members oldtimer Posted July 18, 2013 Members Report Posted July 18, 2013 What an excellent tool. I´m gonna make me one tomorrow! Thank´s Bruce Quote "The gun fight at the O.K. corral was actually started by two saddlemakers sitting around a bottle of whiskey talking about saddle fitting"...
Members SecondChances Posted July 18, 2013 Members Report Posted July 18, 2013 Am I the only one who is having problems getting the photos to pull up? Quote
Recommended Posts
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.