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Posted (edited)

I'm not satisfied with my edges, or rather the life of the burnished edges.

I get a really good result with Fenice edge ink (Not Tandy's but probably the same.) but it gives a little "rubber feeling" which works on some projects.

The way i burnish.

1. Sand.

2. Bevel edges.

3. Burnish with saddle soap (burnish, sand, burnish..) until i'm satisfied.

4. Dye (Regular oil dye)

5. Final polish with Beeswax.

The initial result is good enough for me. On things like a credit card wallet the durability is good, on a watch strap the edges soon looks worn.

And if i fold it (a wallet, notebook-cover or something like that, it becomes small "cracks" in the finish where it folds))

Is there anything i should do different? or is there something better to use? Beraud?

Attached an example.

I hope everyone understand me despite of my bad grammatics.

Thanks in advance.

post-64328-0-59853600-1443906134_thumb.j

Edited by DR80
  • Members
Posted

Im not real sure why you would sand before beveling edges, or why you would need to sand inbetween burnishing.

You do need a certain quality of leather to get good burnished edges. Some leather just wont burnish worth a darn.

  • Members
Posted

Im not real sure why you would sand before beveling edges, or why you would need to sand inbetween burnishing.

You do need a certain quality of leather to get good burnished edges. Some leather just wont burnish worth a darn.

I like to make the stitching line before i bevel my edges. And i have to sand before i make my stitching line :)

The quality of the leather is good.

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Posted

I think you are being to hard on yourself...As a customer I would never complain about those edges...they look good to me .

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Posted

I think Legion might be on to something, I'm a bit of a perfectionist, still I can't make every piece look as good

as factory, with all their expensive equipment and so on , But I try as I go to better myself, thus less strain and greef,

and my learning curve continues, as in a good continuing education. Hope I'm not babeling --- Wild Bill46

  • Members
Posted

I think you are being to hard on yourself...As a customer I would never complain about those edges...they look good to me .

Yes it's true. It looks good, but for every piece i make i want do to things better.

I think Legion might be on to something, I'm a bit of a perfectionist, still I can't make every piece look as good

as factory, with all their expensive equipment and so on , But I try as I go to better myself, thus less strain and greef,

and my learning curve continues, as in a good continuing education. Hope I'm not babeling --- Wild Bill46

"with all their expensive equipment and so on" The interesting part here is what equipment do they have that makes those edges better. I need that equipment or a "working substitute" to that equipment.

Just now i'm working on a watch strap prototype with padding, i can't explain why, but on those edges i find it nice with Fenice on the edges, on the finished piece i will probably use a gloss agent too.

  • Members
Posted

When you say edge ink, do you mean the Fenice Edge Paint? How many coats are you doing? I'd do 3-5 coats.

I don't bevel anything that I'm going to use paint on. I think a flat edge is better for paint. I only bevel when I follow Bob's (Hidepounder) tutorial.

I just started using the gloss edge agent and I think it helps some. Only edge paints left I'd like to try are Giardini and Beraud.

  • Members
Posted

When you say edge ink, do you mean the Fenice Edge Paint? How many coats are you doing? I'd do 3-5 coats.

I don't bevel anything that I'm going to use paint on. I think a flat edge is better for paint. I only bevel when I follow Bob's (Hidepounder) tutorial.

I just started using the gloss edge agent and I think it helps some. Only edge paints left I'd like to try are Giardini and Beraud.

This one: http://www.ds-leder.de/ink-edge.html

It depends on if the edge is trimmed after glue or not. But a trimmed edge is 2-3 layers. Not trimmed 3-5 like you.

I bevel the edge with the smallest beveler (size:0)

One thing i think is important is to "burn" the first layer of paint (with a wood burnisher/canvas or fileteuse) How are you doing?

I can show the result of my prototype's edge when i'm done.

  • Members
Posted (edited)

I can't read Swedish but that doesn't look like paint but I may be wrong. Sometimes I put wax on after the first coat of paint and I heat treat with the fileteuse. Then sand and add more coats.

Edited by thefanninator

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