Members Windrider30 Posted November 9, 2016 Members Report Posted November 9, 2016 Ok I have yet to give up on the idea of doing a tooled waist coat, BUT unforitnatly I think I may have to do it panelled, not what I had in mind but I might have to do that, but here is the question that I have. For a waist coat, or jerkin how large of a piece of a hide do I need, I am think I would need at least a double shoulder as I do not think a single shoulder would work. Quote
Members Norton Custom Leather Posted November 15, 2016 Members Report Posted November 15, 2016 if you have a pattern or measurements you could get in contact with a tailor who should be able to tell you. if not get in touch with springfield leather in missouri & they should be able to help Quote
Members Windrider30 Posted November 15, 2016 Author Members Report Posted November 15, 2016 On 11/15/2016 at 4:03 PM, Norton Custom Leather said: if you have a pattern or measurements you could get in contact with a tailor who should be able to tell you. if not get in touch with springfield leather in missouri & they should be able to help Expand one big problem with springfield leather....I am in Australia lol Quote
Members johnv474 Posted November 24, 2016 Members Report Posted November 24, 2016 It would be about as much material as a long sleeved shirt, maybe a bit more if you put extra pockets and trim. Take a shirt that fits you, button it, and lay it out on a piece of cardboard or big sheet of paper. Then turn it over and lay it next to the other one, with a few inches between then (say, 6"). Then draw a big rectangle that surrounds both shirt outlines, with a margin of about 6" all around. Multiply the length by the width of the rectangle and that's about how much area you'll need. It makes a different whether you wear size small or XXXL, and whether you want to have one pocket or ten, so it's challenging to give an estimate, but that will give you an idea. A single shoulder probably will not work. They tend to be 5 - 9 sq ft. You'll likely want a double shoulder or more. Better to have extra. Quote
Members Halitech Posted November 25, 2016 Members Report Posted November 25, 2016 Conversion from Yardage to Sq. Ft. As mentioned above, leather is generally measured in square feet (sq. ft.), but some patterns call for a certain number of yards. Use the examples below as guidelines to convert the yards into sq. ft.: The pattern calls for 3 yards of 36" fabric. Use a conversion factor of 9: 3 x 9 = 27 Add 20% 6 Total...33 sq. ft. needed. The pattern calls for 3 yards of 45" fabric. Use a conversion factor of 11: 3 x 11 = 33 Add 20% 7 Total....40 sq. ft. needed. The pattern calls for 3 yards of 54" fabric. Use a conversion factor of 13: 3 x 13 = 39 Add 20% 8 Total....47 sq. ft. needed. Adding the 20% allows some extra to make up for imperfections, holes or any loss in cutting. https://www.tandyleather.ca/en/leather-buying-guide.html Quote Every day you learn something is a good day. If you don't learn something every day, was it worth waking up for?
Members Windrider30 Posted November 27, 2016 Author Members Report Posted November 27, 2016 Thanks all that will help greatly! Quote
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