Members Beret Posted January 25, 2016 Members Report Posted January 25, 2016 Hi all! My website is finally up and running, and I've been pretty busy. The panels are tooled in veg tan, then hand painted and finished and mounted to a latigo or bridle bass with solid brass hardware. I do all the design work and patternmaking in AI and then make my patterns Right now, I'm running about a 4 month wait list and working on developing the business model a bit more. Currently shopping around for makers stamps and presses to stamp the collar tongue. Would love any input! Very interested in the Hex N Hit stamps out of Thailand. http://www.bullyflop.com/ Thanks! Quote
Members Beret Posted January 25, 2016 Author Members Report Posted January 25, 2016 And nekkid leather: Quote
Members venator Posted January 25, 2016 Members Report Posted January 25, 2016 Those look fantastic. With regards to stamps I've used http://lwleathers.com/ for a few and been very happy with the results. Quick turn around, great quality. I personally use a 2 ton arbor press to stamp with and it works beautifully for me plus it allows for super easy riveting and snap install. Quote
Members Beret Posted January 25, 2016 Author Members Report Posted January 25, 2016 (edited) Those look fantastic. With regards to stamps I've used http://lwleathers.com/ for a few and been very happy with the results. Quick turn around, great quality. I personally use a 2 ton arbor press to stamp with and it works beautifully for me plus it allows for super easy riveting and snap install. Great to know! I've been poking around those presses a bit. Do you use it primarily with veg tanned, or have you tried it on a latigo or bridle-type too? That's my primary concern... Getting in the supplies and having the stamp done, only to have it not make enough of the impression in the more heavily-oiled leathers. I use 9/10oz latigo and double shoulder bridle from Zack White. Edited January 25, 2016 by Beret Quote
Members venator Posted January 25, 2016 Members Report Posted January 25, 2016 I use it to press our logo onto quite a few things. I went upstairs and stamped 3 pieces of leather for you and snapped a pic on my phone. The top one is a latigo strip from tandy. The middle is a piece of bridle leather from Abbey England The bottom one is a piece of bridle leather from RJF (Who advertises on the forum) You can see that the latigo and the RJF sample easily took the stamp, the middle one which is the most heavily waxed of the three didn't take as well. I didn't heat the stamp, I literally just slapped it all in the press and pulled hard. If I'd heated it the stamp would have taken even better. If you do get an arbor press get at least a 2 ton. Quote
Members venator Posted January 25, 2016 Members Report Posted January 25, 2016 Also that stamp was from Calvin at LW leathers. Quote
Members Beret Posted January 25, 2016 Author Members Report Posted January 25, 2016 Oh, wonderful thank you!!! Quote
Members venator Posted January 25, 2016 Members Report Posted January 25, 2016 Other questions? Quote
Members Beret Posted January 25, 2016 Author Members Report Posted January 25, 2016 (edited) That's really the step I've been trying to tackle at this point. That and combating this weekend case of developing carpal tunnel. Apparently hands and wrists don't appreciate 9 hours of straight tooling and painting in an afternoon 3 days in a row. Go figure. Edited January 25, 2016 by Beret Quote
Members venator Posted January 25, 2016 Members Report Posted January 25, 2016 My girlfriend is the one who does tooling, I can but I really have neither the patience nor the dexterity for it. Too many years of powerlifting I guess. Quote
Members stacy739 Posted January 25, 2016 Members Report Posted January 25, 2016 First rate work. Quote
Members Beret Posted January 26, 2016 Author Members Report Posted January 26, 2016 First rate work. Thank you! That means a lot. My girlfriend is the one who does tooling, I can but I really have neither the patience nor the dexterity for it. Too many years of powerlifting I guess. Sounds like a pretty solid deal. My man thing's contribution to my work is letting me take over a bedroom as studio space. Quote
Members Beret Posted January 26, 2016 Author Members Report Posted January 26, 2016 Another couple heading to Canada today Quote
Members MonicaJacobson Posted January 27, 2016 Members Report Posted January 27, 2016 These are awesome and imaginative. Thanks for the pictures! Quote
Members cowdog128 Posted January 27, 2016 Members Report Posted January 27, 2016 Your painting is amazing may I ask what type of paint you use? Quote
Members Beret Posted January 27, 2016 Author Members Report Posted January 27, 2016 Thank you all! Your painting is amazing may I ask what type of paint you use? Thank you! I use a combination of Angelus and Eco-Flo, depending on what I need the consistency to be. I will mix/blend the two together as well. I've found that I get better opaque coverage with Angelus, but eco flo blends better for gradients, etc. My metallics are eco-flo and then for some, I do some light antiquing over the paint with either the dark brown or black antique gel. I finish with fiebings acrylic resolene top coat. Quote
Reegesc Posted January 27, 2016 Report Posted January 27, 2016 (edited) Very refreshing to see original design work. ~Clap~Clap~Clap~ Edit: But if you tell me you've only been at it for six months I'm gonna smack ya. ;-) Edited January 27, 2016 by cseeger Quote
Members Beret Posted January 28, 2016 Author Members Report Posted January 28, 2016 Very refreshing to see original design work. ~Clap~Clap~Clap~ Edit: But if you tell me you've only been at it for six months I'm gonna smack ya. ;-) Ha! Been at it about 2 years, have been selling for about a year, but I've grown the business over the past 6 months months so... Still a pup, yeah. But my crazy dog people niche is all over it. And... thank you. I put A LOT of time etc into the design work. Quote
Members Itch Posted January 28, 2016 Members Report Posted January 28, 2016 Very nice work . If you are looking for a press to do the end of your collars look in to a self centering press and you can have the cutter made any way that you like. This is how we do our belt's . https://youtu.be/volr1-kqK5E Quote
Members Beret Posted February 1, 2016 Author Members Report Posted February 1, 2016 Thanks so much guys. This is what's on my desk right now... Carved, edges are burnished, just waiting on some color before being mounted to the base, Quote
Members jstar61 Posted February 1, 2016 Members Report Posted February 1, 2016 Your work is great. I however would be careful with copyrighted material. The movie studios don't mess around. Quote
Members Beret Posted February 1, 2016 Author Members Report Posted February 1, 2016 Your work is great. I however would be careful with copyrighted material. The movie studios don't mess around. Thanks, yeah I've spoke with a couple attorneys about it and the general consensus is essentially that as every piece is individually designed for and commissioned by the buyer, the onus can be thought to primarily fall on them, each is a one-off and that the pieces are intentionally transformative enough to be, in general, ok. But I agree, it's a sticky area, Quote
Members MonicaJacobson Posted February 1, 2016 Members Report Posted February 1, 2016 I don't think you'd have any trouble if you don't include any of the key names in the description. Quote
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