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garypl

Help With Pattern From Stohlman's Book On Holsters

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This is my first post and I hope someone can help me. I attempted to make my first holster using the pattern on pg 23 of the Al Stohlman book. I cut out the pattern and did some carving on the front - my first attempt at carving and it was very enjoyable! See attached pictures (I hope they are viewable.)

I then tried to fold the pattern over to see how it would fit together and for the life of me I don't see how this will form a holster! There is a fold line to form the belt loop.

Has as anyone made this particular style holster and can help me to understand what I need to do to make it work? I think the right and left sides should almost be mirror images so they line up for sewing.

I have been reading this forum for some time and have learned an incredible amount from the members - thanks to everyone for the wonderful information!

Gary

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The notes mention fillers and end plugs? What hand gun are you making/ constructing this for?

I have this book, I will check it out in the morning! (don't know if I will be able to help- but now I am curious)

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It's for a S&W k frame revolver with 2" barrel. I cut out a pattern, but no matter how I fold it the edges do not line up.

Thanks for taking a look at the pattern!

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I'm willing to admit I may not be understanding your question, but click the drawing ...

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Edited by JLSleather

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I never thought to fold it forward and then back like you show in your drawing! I think it will work now - I'll check it in the morning and let you know if everything aligns. Thanks very much for your help - I knew someone would have the answer!

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Well, I tried folding the pattern every way possible and it just doesn't look like it will work. I start by making a fold on the fold line - Picture #2. Then I fold the pattern again so the loop is in the rear - picture #3. The rear view of the pattern is shown in picture #4 - the loop is now more vertical instead of roughly horizontal as it should be so the holster will hang properly from a belt. Unless anyone has any ideas, I am thinking it might be easier to start from scratch and make a new pattern....

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Thanks for the suggestion! I will try it tomorrow and let you know how it works out.

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Good news - I changed the fold per your suggestion and now it looks like a holster! Now that I see how it works I don't understand why I couldn't see it before.

I will post a picture when I finish it - this will be my practice piece - I plan to make another using thinner leather with a lining.

This is forum is a great resource and I am very grateful to all the members for sharing information.

Gary

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I'm glad it worked for you. I just got a new S&W J frame snubby, so I'm working up a new pattern for myself for an IWB holster. Once I finish that one, I may have to print out a copy of this page from the holster book and modify the pattern to fit the J frame.

If that works, I may make this pattern longer to fit my old Model 10 4" bbl.

Edited by byggyns

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I think on the previous page (22) there is a similar pattern for 4 or 6" k frames. I was going to see how this pattern (pg 23) fits my 3" Ruger SP101. If it is not a good fit it may work with my S&W J frame. If nothing else, this is a good learning experience for my first attempt at a holster.

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Well, I finished my first holster. I made a few mistakes along the way (punched a few crooked holes along the seam, made the belt loop a little tight, and generally just didn't finish it as well as I should have.)

It does fit my Ruger 3" SP101 and it also worked with my S&W J frame. One of the hardest tasks was punching the holes for the edge seam through both sides of the holster and the welt. I started the holes with a 2 prong punch on each side and then finished the holes with an awl. Must be an easier way to do it?

I will appreciate any comments and criticism. Next project I want to try is a holster for a Ruger Blackhawk.

Thanks again to everyone for sharing all the helpful information on this forum!

Gary

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There really isn't an easier way to do it with hand stitching tools. You could use a drill press to drill the holes for your main seam, but I don't like the round hole look.

You just need to sharpen that awl really well so it slides through the leather like butter. Also, you really need a clamp / stitching horse when dealing with this weight of leather. Having the ability to press a cork to the back side when pushing the awl through is really helpful, and not having to juggle the holster, 2 needles, thread, and the awl all at the same time is nice.

For your first holster, your edges turned out a lot better than my first attempt. The stitching looks pretty clean as well.

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Thanks for your comments! I wonder if drilling small holes first, followed by punching the leather with a punching awl would work? I will try this when I get some spare time.

I used a stitching pony to hold the holster while stitching, but some of the thicker areas required me to take it out and hold it down on the table while I used the awl to punch the holes. You are right about keeping the awl sharp.

I will learn from this attempt and try another holster soon.

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What I do with holsters is punch a few holes, making sure the top and bottom line up (the middle should line up if the top and bottom do), then I stitch them with a small piece of thread, then I punch a few more holes and stitch them with another small piece of thread. I work my way up using small but strong spring powered clamps to keep the sides together straight, making sure the top is still aligned, punch a few holes at a time and stitch them, etc. Till I get to the top. I use 2-3 oz leather between the clamps and the leather to prevent them from leaving dents.

I just use small piece of thread to stitch the holes a few at a time so when I undo the bottom thread holding a few holes together I can start with my final thread and the rest are held together. Thread the few holes the first small piece of thread was holding together. Then undo the next small piece holding the next few holes together and stitch them etc.

This technique works great on long barreled holsters like the Python 375mag. But I imagine it would work on smaller ones too. Anytime I have like a long stretch of stitching to do, I line the sides up, clamp them together and punch a few holes, stitch them, then punch a few more, then go back and run the final thread.

Sometimes I have to use real small "C" Clamps, the kind with threads, to press the leather together and hold it until I can get the holes punched and threaded. My stitching pony only holds items, it won't hold them together while using an awl or something to poke holes, or to punch them. I did have to use a small piece of 2-3oz leather between the "C" clamp and the holster so that the discs on the "C" clamp don't leave dents.

I hope this helps...

Bob

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Thanks for the tip Bob! Question: do you glue the pieces before you stitch the edges? Or do you just use the small pieces of thread to hold everything in alignment?

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I typically stitch 4-5 holes so the stitches hold it in place w/o glue. I don't think even contact cement would hold a holster in place while I punched holes, or poked them. I use the clamps to hold it in place while I punch the holes and stitch small segments together. I usually use a very thick 8-9 or 10-11 ounce leather to make a holster, then I also use a pig skin lining so the rough flesh side of the leather doesn't rub the bluing off the gun. Here I live by a Tandy outlet. They have pig skin for $20, it is about 7-9 sf. It is very thin, but it just needs to keep the flesh side away from the gun, so It works great as a liner. I only glue the bend, where the holster is bent in half w/contact cement. Other wise it wrinkles when I bend it over. I first bend the holster, put the contact cement on both pieces, then slide the pig skin in with it about half way bent over. Then hold it bent all the way until it dries. Bending the leather and keeping it bent for a while helps to hold the holster in the bent position once your ready to stitch. But that is the only glue I use on a holster. Generally I will use an over sized piece of pig skin, then trim it once I bend the holster leather all the way shut. I can't get it to line up otherwise. I just use small scissors to cut it once I have it bent but before I stitch it or lace it.

Bob

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Thanks for the additional tips Bob. I never tried this method, but I had the same problem trying to punch holes in thick leather without moving the glue joint - just too much stress pulling the diamond chisel out of thick leather.

I would have thought that the liner would bunch up unless it was glued over its entire surface. I guess it is only held in place by the stitches around the edge? I already started a second holster and used leather that is about 1/8" thick and lined it with some very thin veg tan leather. I made and cut a pattern, then glued the liner - I already see what you mean about the wrinkles. I will post some pictures as I progress with the new holster - I am learning new techniques every day!

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Yeah, every time I made anything out of leather and glued the entire liner to the cover it wrinkled at the bend. What I do is pre-bend the cover, then glue the liner while it is bent. It can be 3/4 bent over and it will still not produce a wrinkle if you glue the liner to it while it is bent 3/4 over. I make a line of glue approximately 3/4 of an inch the whole length of the holster/checkbook what have you, and make a 3/4 inch wide strip of glue on the liner, then stick them together. Then bend it the rest of the way after your glue it and let it dry. Then the stitches will hold the rest of it because it has no where to go. The glue holds it at the bend and the stitches hold it at the ends. Tricky to figure out, but it seems to work on check books too. For wallets I use a different technique because they open all the way. I would have to send you some pictures of the wallet I am making now to show you how I do it. But it prevents the dreaded wrinkles too.

You're welcome. Let me know how it turns out. BTW, I "think" Sears had the very small "C" clamps I use, but you could probably find them on ebay or something. The ones I use are about 1-1/2" in length.

Best Wishes!

Bob

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I hand stitched holsters, tack and saddles for years and my method couldn't be more different than you two are talking about. I glue the main seam with a good quality contact cement, usually Masters or Barge. If you use it per the directions it will generally hold. If you have a tight fold on a thick piece of leather you may have to wet the fold or put a few hand shoe tacks in the stitch groove to help hold it. Typically the only time I've had trouble is with saddle scabbards out of 12-14 oz leather down at the barrel end, usually the contact cement just holds. Anyway, once it's glued I place one of those rubber poundo boards that Tandy sells over a vinyl cutting board and stab all of my holes straight down through the stitch groove. The leather is stable while stabbing so it doesn't try to push out of shape. I never had a problem with the cutting board dulling my awl and the 1/4" or so thickness of the rubber poundo mat makes a nice depth to stab through the back side. Once all of the holes are stabbed put it in a stitching horse and sew it up with one piece of thread with a needle at each end using a saddle stitch. When I make a lined holster the lining is solidly cemented to the main piece then treated like a single layer. If it wants to wrinkle on the fold then wet it a little and smooth it out with a smooth faced hammer. With a sewing machine everything is the same until it's glued, instead of stabbing holes with an awl and then saddle stitching it just goes tot he sewing machine.

Different strokes for different folks, everybody should do what works best for them.

Good luck figuring out your way,

Josh

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Thanks Bob and Josh for your ideas. I already glued the liner so if it wrinkles I will try your method Josh to smooth it out.

l am learning that there are typically several ways to do the same operation and I keep an open mind to trying different techniques to find what works best for me.

My progress has slowed a bit lately due to workload, but I will post updates on my new Ruger Blackhawk holster, good or bad!

Gary

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Hey Gary,

I'm curious about smoothing out the wrinkles with a smooth hammer. Do you mean a round/ball shaped hammer that you kind of tap it into place with? At what point do you hit the wrinkles with the hammer. Seems to me if you wait too long the glue would dry and it wouldn't help.

Are there "any" wrinkles left after your method?

I do suppose if you glued the two flesh sides of the same piece of leather together on a holster that perhaps they would hold during punching or jabbing the needle through, but I use a smooth pig skin that has been dyed black for my liners, and they would never hold together when punching or jabbing. How long do you let the contact cement dry before jabbing your holster's holes for stitching?

Josh, I'm looking forward to seeing your holster. I will try to get my latest one in my next reply...

Bob

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Here are a couple pictures of my last holster. Notice the holster stays folded by itself. That is because I glued it when it was almost completely shut. I may have used more than 3/4" strip of glue on it now that I think of it. Maybe 1 to 1-1/2" strip on both the liner and the cover. It helps to hold it shut, but more importantly no wrinkles...


UnStitched Acorn Stamped Python .357 Mag Holster


Completed Acorn Stamped Python .357 Mag Holster w/Bullet Belt

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Here is a link to the small "C" clamps I use on eBay:

http://www.ebay.com/itm/2-Mini-C-Clamp-Heavy-Duty-All-Steel-Fits-in-Small-Spaces-1-1-2-Throat-/400660145730?hash=item5d4934a642:g:uTAAAOSwkZhWTxmj

You do have to put a thin piece (2-3oz) of leather between both sides of the discs to keep them from denting your leather, but they hold very well.

Bob

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Nice looking holster Bob! I haven't tried smoothing liner leather yet - it was a technique suggested by Josh. When I fold my Blackhawk holster, I will try Josh's technique to smooth the leather with a smooth hammer. I will post results.

I always wet leather when bending it. I have made a couple of knife sheaths and shooting bags and I don't think it would be possible to bend the leather without wetting it first.

Gary

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