Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted
8 hours ago, JerseyFirefighter said:

Im interested in the remedy to this. Particularly for dog collars since I have some suede and calf skin sitting around not being used. Would the appropriate method be to over cut the liner around the outer piece, and cement them together around something like say a coffee can or pvc pipe so it molds correctly? Or is there a trick to glueing prior to stitching that compensates for the bend in the final product?

In this case if you are using the suede as a liner it would not be much of an issue. Cut your suede length about a 1/4" shorter and stretch it evenly over the length to reach when you glue attach it. Presto.

WH.jpgWild Harry - Australian made leather goods
YouTube Channel
Instagram

Posted
On 29/12/2016 at 5:37 AM, CaptQuirk said:

When I'm using a heavier leather outside, and a lighter liner, it isn't much of an issue. But I recently did a holster with 5/6oz inside and out. After gluing the layers and bending it over, the inside wrinkled worse than an old woman after a long bath really bad. Is there a way to prevent this, or is it even an issue?

Whatever the leather thickness is and I want to be sure, I cut 2 strips normally about 3/4 to 1" wide and wrap one over whatever and cut or mark its length. With the other i now put it over the first and mark its corresponding length. Whatever the difference is should work well enough. 

WH.jpgWild Harry - Australian made leather goods
YouTube Channel
Instagram

  • Contributing Member
Posted

EXACTLY!  Best way to know.  I think where folks get into "issues", they make a pattern (often from paper) and then use that pattern to mark the OUTside instead of the INside.

 

JLS  "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.

5 leather patterns

  • Members
Posted

Somewhere along the way, I read somebody say to glue the 2 pieces together and treat it as a single piece. I tried it, and that didn't work out. I will go back to forming the outside, then gluing the inside to it. Never had a problem like this before.

Posted
3 hours ago, CaptQuirk said:

Somewhere along the way, I read somebody say to glue the 2 pieces together and treat it as a single piece. I tried it, and that didn't work out. I will go back to forming the outside, then gluing the inside to it. Never had a problem like this before.

If you are using the inside lining thickness the same as the outside thickness then I would do the inside forming first then overlay the outside to it and trim. Least ways that's the way I do a formed knife pouch when I cover in croc.

DSC05498_resize.JPG

WH.jpgWild Harry - Australian made leather goods
YouTube Channel
Instagram

  • Members
Posted

@RockyAussie- I usually also form the outside, just to get a little more detail, then lay it over the inside to form them together. It just gets a little tricky to glue them together, punch the holes for stitching, etc. Gluing the two layers first sounded plausible, but just didn't work out as well.

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.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...