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Posted

hi,

beginner here and I recently started saddle stitching w vergez blanchard tools and I use cheaper remnant leathers to practice and they never come in thin quality sizes, although I use a skiving knife to thin the thick edges, usually I deal w leather where my pricking tool wont help to leave/ marks on the back side, is using REVERSE / INVERSE PRICKING IRON which i recently found on vergez tools website, is it for this purpose?

/also do you know which pricking size hermes uses usually? no. 10 or 9 please? /

thank you!

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Hermes uses a few different size irons and use portmanteau/ inverse irons instead of regular irons on the front side. Just a guess but they probably use 9 to 11 for watch straps and horse saddle and I would think around 8-9 for the larger goods. If I had to guess I would say 8 vergez (dixon 7 equivalent) I have the 9 vergez and the stitch looks a bit smaller. I wouldn't be surprised if they use 9 for the handle and 8 for the dee shield part (part that connects the handle to the bag) . They are very close in size so its hard to say. Keep in mind that a majority of their goods are machine stitched or mostly

I recently have had success with cast the thread - left needle first, right needle second, take the loop on the backside and throw it over the needle (away from yourself). The few times I have used it before was using thin leather and it didn't work so well. On thicker leather the stitch looks nice and with thin thread .6mm thread it looks better IMO than thicker .8mm. This technique if you are able to get the holes somewhat straight the back stitch will look neat. Even hermes items if you look through google images has imperfections in the stitches and isn't suppose to be 100 percent perfect. In my opinion casting the thread is a better option than not casting the thread with stretchy leathers like chrome or pull up and thick leathers.

You could also use the same iron on both sides, wont give you the angled stitch though. Same could be done with a inverse on the opposite side especially on very thick leathers . On a single piece of leather or multiple pieces of leather that is glued together usually the iron is hit on one side and stitched up. Another thing you could try is to hammer the edges in gently after its glued or use one of those clamp pliers and compress the edges to get a better stitch.

Okay, enough ranting from me..

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Posted (edited)

hi DavidL, thank you much for your post, very helpful! I have size 10 and it looks a little short than bigger hermes bag stitches,

Can you explain please also why Hermes uses portmanteau instead of regular irons for the front side? Is it only the direction of the angled stitches that change in that case?

Edited by naz
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Posted

yes the stitch goes downwards to the left stitching towards you. In the corners the stitches will be slanted with the Portmanteau. With the reg. iron the stitch is straight or its angled upwards and separated instead of slanted and close together like the Portmanteau.

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If you get the chance, at an airport or something it is worth visiting a Hermes shop, they are happy for you to have a look at their range of small leather goods & yes you can handle them, get a good look. I recently spent some time at one in Paris, shop was very quiet so I think the sales guy was just happy someone was interested in having a look !

First thing that stands out, the stitching isn't prefect, it's very good but you can easily spot the hand made items.

If you handle them you will understand why they look so much better than anything the average leatherworker can produce, it's the leather they use, it's so much better than the stuff that is readily available to the public, the texture, firmness etc is just what you want for hand stitching, that & the edge tools/paints they use are the real difference

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Macca whats your take on the best leather species to work with (calf, cow, bull, kangaroo) that gives the nicest stitch and best leather to use as padding to thicken leather bag bottoms (they all seem similar and it might be a waste to use calf).

I find the denseness of kangaroo veg cuts great and stitches up nicely.

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Posted

The inverse pricking iron has tines that are reveresed from the standard..OR as David wrote in the first post, you won't get slanted stitches. That's because if you punch both sides with the same pricking iron, the slots will for an ' X ' instead of a ' / ' when the pieces are put together. To get the same angle all the way through, the front and back stitch holes have to be mirrored.

Mike DeLoach

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"Don't learn the tricks of the trade.....Learn the trade."

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Posted

The inverse pricking iron has tines that are reveresed from the standard..OR as David wrote in the first post, you won't get slanted stitches. That's because if you punch both sides with the same pricking iron, the slots will for an ' X ' instead of a ' / ' when the pieces are put together. To get the same angle all the way through, the front and back stitch holes have to be mirrored.

Holy shit! Someone actually understands what I was trying to say in the other thread that lasted 5+ pages.

Sorry that was off topic but its nice to see I'm not crazy.

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Posted

... an ideal application for these pricking irons is on a mitred corner of a box.

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Posted (edited)

Ok, you all keep on doing what you're doing. I'll keep stitching using the same iron on both sides and will continue to get good stitches on both sides of my work. :)

Edited by 25b
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