Members JenGranger Posted December 26, 2016 Members Report Posted December 26, 2016 I want to hear about your homemade tools and other ways you have saved money one tools and supplies. I'm am on a low fixed income and had no idea how expensive leathercraft would be when I got into it and it was too late to turn back. So I've been trying to find ways to do this and save money. I get my practice leather from the local Army Surplus Store out of a dusty old box for 3 small pieces for a dollar. Most of it is 6oz or thicker and very stiff and dry and wouldn't even be suitable for boot soles. But at least it's leather to practice on... My dad let me cut off a couple of 18" pieces of two by fours and gave me one of his C-clamps to make a stitching pony for when I'm ready to learn how to stitch. He also gave me a ceramic knife sharpener for my 28 year old hand-me-down swivel knife, so that's one less thing I have to buy. I found a large nail I could sharpen up to make a scratch awl until I can get a real one. I have some nylon thread that I had bought for another project and I have 6oz of beeswax and figured I could coat the nylon thread with beeswax and use some large embroidery needles to practice with until I can save up to get the proper supplies. I was thinking I could make my stitch holes with a very small nail and hammer until I can get an awl. how creative have you gotten? Quote
Members JenGranger Posted December 26, 2016 Author Members Report Posted December 26, 2016 I forgot to push the button that lets you know when people have replied, so this is what this comment is for lol Quote
Members cjartist Posted December 26, 2016 Members Report Posted December 26, 2016 I have not been very creative with the tools. I did need to replicate a stitch pattern into the design of my most recent project though and found that a small flathead screwdriver gave me just the look I wanted. When I started it began by admiring the work of an artist creating leather masks. I then bought a storage unit at auction that had a bunch of old Tandy tools in it. The amount of tools I have personally bought has been minimal. It is the leather and hardware that is expensive. If you are considering making items that are not tooled, keep your eyes open for a leather sofa sitting on the curb on garbage day. As long as it is real leather, a box cutter and a few minutes of your time can give you something to make bags or wallets out of. Quote Check out my Unique Marketing Strategy and see if it might also work for you to get paid for your art.
Members JenGranger Posted December 26, 2016 Author Members Report Posted December 26, 2016 I have taken apart many old purses for the leather for the back of my Native American beadwork barrettes and medallions long before I got into leathercraft. Quote
Members tnhomestead Posted December 26, 2016 Members Report Posted December 26, 2016 Piece of 1 by 4, put some 600 grit wet dry paper on one side and a piece of leather rubbed in rouge on the other side to strop your blades. Make a round knife from a old table saw blade if your handy enough. The stiching pony is an easy build, just put a spring inside on the bolt so it pops open -- makes life a lot easier! Quote
bikermutt07 Posted December 26, 2016 Report Posted December 26, 2016 When you do buy tools, save some money by not buying leather specific tools. A cheap dead blow mallet, pliers, or razor knife will work as good as anything in a leather shop, to a point. A fork can be used to mark your holes consistently. You can even make your own dye if you have access to useful trees in your area. A really sharp chisel can be a great leather knife. If you use a nail to punch your holes run it through that wax to keep it from sticking in the leather. Use a butter knife as a backer to keep the leather from pulling up with the nail as you remove it. Sandpaper is cheap to true up the edges and I have seen edge bevellers made out of flat head screw drivers. Just remember people worker thousands of years with leather before their was a Tandy. Just get creative. Keep having fun. Quote I'm not paying 80 bucks for a belt!!! It's a strip of leather. How hard could it be? 4 years and 3 grand later.... I have a belt I can finally live with. Stitching is like gravy, it's only great if you make it every day. From Texas but in Bossier City, Louisiana.
Members JenGranger Posted December 26, 2016 Author Members Report Posted December 26, 2016 Thanks! Quote
Members Willie0 Posted December 26, 2016 Members Report Posted December 26, 2016 This guy has some amazingly creative ideas: http://asailorsleather.blogspot.com/2008/10/homemade-leather-tool.html Quote
Members zuludog Posted December 26, 2016 Members Report Posted December 26, 2016 (edited) I got an old decorator's filling knife at a car boot sale for 50p, about 65 US cents? and about 1 1/2'' wide at the end; but basically a good one with a proper forged spring steel blade, not cheap stamped metal. Scruffy & rusty I cleaned it up and sharpened & shaped the end with a file & stones. Now it's a skiving knife A colleague at work made himself a knife blade from an old industrial hacksaw blade, about 40mm wide, and I added a handle & made a sheath. There was a smallish piece left over, about 110mm long and 38mm wide when the teeth had been ground off. I made this into another skiving knife. He ground the cutting edge and I finished it myself with stones & strop I had a cheap & nasty block plane that was fiddly to use & adjust so I never used it. But the blade was quite good so I turned it into a Japanese style leather knife. again, he did the shaping on a bench grinder I have a carbon steel vegetable knife that I no longer use in the kitchen, blade about 4''. I fitted a fatter handle, shaped & sharpened it, and that is a clicker knife For cutting I mainly use a craft knife - 'Stanley' in Britain, 'box cutter' in USA I think. This was also cheap at a secondhand tool stall; cleaned it up, and also the rusty old blades it contained. Although they're meant to be disposable they actually seem to get better if you resharpen them, probably because you reduce the shoulder of the bevel, and polish them For a scratch awl I use an old dart head mounted in an old wooden file handle I use the glass oven door from an old cooker to skive on Yes, get some beeswax. Besides waxing thread it is used for all sorts of odds & ends in leatherwork The key to good leatherwork is very sharp tools, whether they're old, new, or home made. Diamond and ceramic stones are currently popular, but the cheapest are probably oilstones, especially as you are most likely to find them secondhand Then work through wet & dry paper on glass, or pin some on a flat piece of wood Make your own strop from scrap leather & wood. You already have your old 6oz leather, try softening it with some kind of leather oil or grease Ask around friends, neighbours, colleagues at work and so on, you never know what might turn up Edited December 26, 2016 by zuludog Quote
Members zuludog Posted December 26, 2016 Members Report Posted December 26, 2016 (edited) However there are a couple of places where I think you should be prepared to pay full price A cutting mat, the usual green thing; get the biggest you can manage; they're not too expensive An awl. For sewing leather the blade has slightly flattened section, and is often called a saddler's awl or a harness awl. Traditionally you buy the blade and the handle separately then fit them together and do the final sharpening yourself; which is a right pain, so it's easier to buy an awl ready for use Do not be tempted by the 4-in-1 awl you often see, especially at Tandy; it is expensive and not very sharp or good. On the other hand I have tried this from Tandy - Craftool Pro Stitching Awl #83020 - 00 and I think it's pretty good. Shop around for the best price you can find; at the moment it's on offer in Britain for £20, about $26 There are loads of videos on sharpening on YouTube, and a complete section on this forum; however I think this is one of the best. Although it is about chisels the techniques can be quite easily used on leather tools 'Preparing and Sharpening Woodworking Chisels' by Paul Sellers Come to think of it, a 1'' or 1 1/2'' wood chisel would make a decent skiving knife; see if there is a secondhand tool stall near you Edited December 26, 2016 by zuludog Quote
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