Boriqua Posted July 19, 2016 Report Posted July 19, 2016 It seems people like my stuff and this is becoming like work! Anyway .. I now have multiple projects going at once and was wondering what some of you do about gluing. I am using weldwood and the actual gluing part is fine. After I let it get almost dry/ tacky I stick it together .. pound it all over with my fist ... take a hammer and tap forcefully all around the edges so I dont get a big seam later when I go to burnish and then I put the glued piece on a piece of clean printer paper, put a piece of wax paper over it, put a hard cover book on top that I dont care much for and then take about 25 lbs of weights that I should be using to keep my muscles from getting more flabby and put it on top of the book for at least over night. So here is my problem... I live in a smallish place and I only have the 25 lbs but I have several things at once that are ready for glue. Is leaving it under weight for 12 hours more time than it needs? Can I place it under weight for say 3-4 hours and then just set the piece aside to cure for the recommended 24 hours So I can put something else under weight sooner. What are you guys who do heavier production doing? Now this doesnt happen often and I am still way small beans but this week and last my method is killing my ability to finish projects I have promised and stressing me out. I could just stop taking custom orders but I hate saying no. Alex Quote
Contributing Member JLSleather Posted July 19, 2016 Contributing Member Report Posted July 19, 2016 I don't "weight" anything. BOP it down tight, and off to the next one. Have yet to see one come apart. Quote "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.
Members klaykrusher Posted July 19, 2016 Members Report Posted July 19, 2016 Same here, I use barge and their directions include hammering the pieces together. That's all I do. I let it sit for 8 to 12 hours to cure. No issues whatsoever with separation. Quote ~Dave
Albob Posted July 19, 2016 Report Posted July 19, 2016 (edited) I guess it depends on why you are gluing. I glue right before I sew just to keep things lined up. I use weldwood and allow it to set up just like you do, I follow that up with a cobblers hamer to set it nice and flat. However I never use glue (contact cement) as a stand alone way of keeping multi layers together. Edited July 19, 2016 by Albob Quote When the poop hits the fan, we's all eleven bravos
Boriqua Posted July 19, 2016 Author Report Posted July 19, 2016 Thank you guys .. I guess I was over thinking it. That is why I came to the experts! Quote
Members Colt W Knight Posted July 20, 2016 Members Report Posted July 20, 2016 I just use a roller to apply pressure all over, and I don't do any weighting. Quote
Boriqua Posted July 20, 2016 Author Report Posted July 20, 2016 8 hours ago, Colt W Knight said: I just use a roller to apply pressure all over, and I don't do any weighting. Any chance you have a link for the roller you are using? Is it very expensive? Alex Quote
Contributing Member Ferg Posted July 20, 2016 Contributing Member Report Posted July 20, 2016 Here is one like I use. Marshalltown E216D 2-Inch Flat Gemstone Plastic Seam Roller-DuraSoft handle19600 by Marshalltown Ferg Quote
Boriqua Posted July 20, 2016 Author Report Posted July 20, 2016 56 minutes ago, Ferg said: Here is one like I use. Marshalltown E216D 2-Inch Flat Gemstone Plastic Seam Roller-DuraSoft handle19600 by Marshalltown Ferg Thanks Ferg ! That is more than reasonably priced. alex Quote
Members eglideride Posted July 20, 2016 Members Report Posted July 20, 2016 I found an old wood rolling pin for about $3.00 at a junk store. Even has worn, red painted handles....I roll over my work with that. Lean on it pretty hard. Keep it in a drawer so I don't have to explain it every time. Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.