Fonzarellis Report post Posted June 1, 2015 (edited) I was at a Bushcraft gathering recently and everyone was doing the show and tell thing with knives and sheath design. One of the guys mentioned he wanted a side draw belt sheath for his Svord Peasant folder. Since this was such an odd shaped knife, I knew it would have to be a wet-mold project which I had never done but was game to try. He agreed to let me take the knife home and see what I could come up with. Now I am a big fan of tooling my sheaths but I know that tooling and wet-molding don't make great bed partners so here's what I did... First off I had to make a custom mold to shape the leather. I rounded out the bottom edges to make a more appealing transition then cut out the leather to a rough size. I wet the leather in distilled water, blotted with a dry towel, and started the shaping process with my fingers. After the leather began to stretch a little, I put it in the mold and started to apply pressure and eventually clamped it down tight. I was surprised how easy it was and how well it came out on the first try. I gave it a rough trim and cut out the back to match. I gave the molded piece a little shape on top and here's how she looked prior to assembly. He wanted it to match a sheath he already had so I gave it a few coats of Mahogany dye and after allowing it to dry, I buffed off the excess. I made sure I burnished the top edge of the molded piece before assembly. The rest is stitching, final trim, shaping the edges, burnishing and applying some Tan-Kote and Satin Sheen. Just for grins, I put a top coat of Atom Wax and buffed it up a bit. I intend to add a couple of small grommets to the corners to make it convertable to a "necker" but I made it with the belt loop as originally intended. It was fun making this and I can see a few more wet-molded projects in the near future. Thanks for looking. Edited June 1, 2015 by Fonzarellis Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Rohn Report post Posted June 1, 2015 Looks great. Very nice work and I enjoyed all the pictures and a review of the process. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
DS STRAPS Report post Posted June 1, 2015 Very nice! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Fonzarellis Report post Posted June 1, 2015 Thanks folks. Super simple looking sheath and it turned out better than I expected. I'm on several forums and I've never seen anthing like it especially for this knife. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Dan28 Report post Posted June 1, 2015 That is a really nice looking sheathe. I also took something away from just the background of your pics that I think is a great idea, using rubber bands to keep your dye daubers attached to your dye. Though I buy my most used dyes in the 32 oz bottles. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Fonzarellis Report post Posted June 2, 2015 What's really funny is that those are hair bands. I like the smaller bottles cuz I set them inside a big roll of blue masking tape to make sure I don't accidentally knock it over while working. You can always refill them from the larger bottles an reduce the bench clutter a bit. I'm still at the experimentation stage on different colors of dyes. I recently discovered that the Dark Brown Antique is a perfect compliment to the Saddle Tan Dye and would make a really beautiful two tone project. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites