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Posted

I dont have need for higher production yet.......but wonder how many holsters you make a week. And if you are alone or have help and approx approximate hours spent.

Only been doing it for the public about a year, and am in the shop anywher from 12-20 hrs a week. Keep fastidious records, just to see what can be done and ideas for the future. I seem to do 5-7 holsters a week and it seems about 3 hrs a holster unless it is something new or odd.

I have a lot of ideas as to little helps on production in the future, but it really seems like a clicker cutting would be the biggest help. A local leather store has a set up and I am sure I could get dies and pay a fee to punch a side of leather out......but I ASSUME that would mean making a lot of the patterns the a general same size. I would also assume the clicker would save timenot only on cutting, but sanding as well.

Amarillo Texas

bambamholsters.com

  • Contributing Member
Posted

Leather people are funny, though they're not the only ones. Long speeches about how it's all "hand made" or "hand crafted". Then they spend thousands of dollars on machines and equipment and its - somehow - still "hand made" ;)

My personal opinion, if someone clicks out parts, machine stitches 'em, press forms 'em, then the 'hand made' is gone. With that happening, then the 'solo' person is doing the same thing as Galco or any other manufacturer.... but Galco (one example) just does it BETTER than they do.

A clicker WOULD absolutely speed things up. Straight cuts can easily and quickly be made with a knife, strap cutter, etc., but the more curves involved the more the clicker will aid the process. The [possible] downside being that the more you try to conform your designs to fewer dies, the more alike they become, and soon your "gallery' of finished goods looks very 'cookie cutter' -- and there goes the 'hand made' scam.

just a note, and a 'plug'... if you like the idea of clicking some parts, but not making holsters which look identical, see George B.'s site.. my opinion he does exactly that - and does it well.

There really isn't all that much to holsters -- not that much in design, not much labor, not much expense. This is of course the reason there are SO many people making them -- it's cheap and easy. The more automated the process can be made, the more people will be jumping on that wagon.

But, as for how many in a week... :dunno: If I wasn't making a new design, or tooling a belt, or on the phone (or killing this time for coffee), then perhaps 30-35. That's a guess based on about 5-a-day (which I have done). Well, IF that chubby girl delivers to the post office for me .... and materials are delivered on time ...

JLS  "Observation is 9/10 of the law."

IF what you do is something that ANYBODY can do, then don't be surprised when ANYBODY does.

5 leather patterns

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Posted

interesting.....I was just conversing with someone this week about "when is it no longer hand made?" and the thought of them having to "look alike" also entered my mind.......I guess I was wonder ing if you guys that do a lot more business than I do, use them

I have had some goals for my first year and pretty much seem to have met them....one of the biggest is working on more than one and knowing what comes next the minute you pick it up....that along with many other things comes with practice and repetition......learned alot along those lines and seems like the more you learn the more questions seem to come to miind, about "well I wonder how others that do more, do it?"

Amarillo Texas

bambamholsters.com

  • Contributing Member
Posted

Yeah, something to be said for repetition -- and organization. I know I could put out more holsters if I didn't tool belts. Some time gets used up (not wasted, but used) putting these tools away and getting "those' tools out, and then back again. Even though the tools aren't actually moved, there is a shift in focus which does cause a bit of slow down - each time.

True of most projects, but just using holsters as an example... certainly a guy can't do 5 holsters in a day, start to finish. Simply because they won't dry quickly enough.. the water, the oil, the finish, etc... all takes time. But a guy CAN cut out (or click) 20, mark as needed, add any snaps / springs / etc. Then day 2, glue, stitch, form Day 3.. oil / finish Day 4 package and ship. Doing this - or something like this - can comfortably work out to 5/ day average.

Same thing with tooling belts.

Cut strips, tips, mark sizing, pair with hardware, put up unused hides.

Tool 4-5

Tool 4-5

Tool 4-5

Dye / stain / oil all 15

line and stitch all 15

pack n ship

And there you have a 2-per-day tooled belt thing.

Now, I'll stop talking about that - since it's been a good while since I got an order for 15 tooled belts, and it's incredibly upsetting ;)

JLS  "Observation is 9/10 of the law."

IF what you do is something that ANYBODY can do, then don't be surprised when ANYBODY does.

5 leather patterns

  • Members
Posted

21 hybrids last week, finished 2 leather holsters, finished about 5 mag holders, got 2 more holsters should be ready by Monday, 3 more should be ready Tuesday. But I do a mix of custom one off stuff and pre built holsters for certain guns. Got a guy coming tomorrow to finish fitting and buy the chest rig for a S&W Stealth Hunter. Oh, and that's on top of my full time job. Hard to believe I actually got to hunt some too. I'm not one for exact record keeping, especially on time. But that's off the top of my head. Started a knife sheath this evening. And got the money for 3 more holsters today.

  • Contributing Member
Posted

OH were we including kydex? Well, then HUNDREDS of em. All same thickness, no marks or scratches to cut out or around, no dyeing, no drying, no oiling.... formed in SECONDS...

JLS  "Observation is 9/10 of the law."

IF what you do is something that ANYBODY can do, then don't be surprised when ANYBODY does.

5 leather patterns

  • Members
Posted

Tooled western rigs take a full work week and I have to hustle. Plain carry rigs with a belt, mag pouch and holster takes a work week and I don't have to hurry too much. I usually put in 2 to 3 hours a day before I go to my "real" job. I have a sewing machine, which has speed up the carry gear a lot and made doing lined items much quicker everything else is done with hand tools.

post-19070-0-72468000-1444657711_thumb.jpost-19070-0-66492500-1444657737_thumb.j

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Posted

Just being a one man shop I can turn out 33 pancakes and avengers in a week figuring 5 days at 10 hours a day. Gun show season and the holidays makes my winters nothing but work. I hand cut, hand edge, machine sand then hand sand edges, hand applied edge dressing and machine sewn.

  • Members
Posted

just a note, and a 'plug'... if you like the idea of clicking some parts, but not making holsters which look identical, see George B.'s site.. my opinion he does exactly that - and does it well.

Friend,

I hate to show my ignorance—but where is George B.'s Site?

He doesn't seem to have a link attached to his Signature.

…..RVM45

.....Though I am forced to live in Exile in the Twenty-First Century; I am proud to retain my Citizenship in the Twentieth Century.

.....RVM45

  • Contributing Member
Posted

Never mind. There's George right there ↑ and he says no clicked parts. I saw some of the work, and it looks like he uses the same design on multiple models for the belt loop. Efficient, without looking monotonous :)

JLS  "Observation is 9/10 of the law."

IF what you do is something that ANYBODY can do, then don't be surprised when ANYBODY does.

5 leather patterns

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