Members MrLentz Posted April 5, 2017 Members Report Posted April 5, 2017 Back before I owned a leather sewing machine I had dreamed up a few designs with the gusset seam as shown below in the photos (not this same bag, but just the seam on it). Once I got my first machine I quickly realized this style of seam did not appear to be possible using a sewing machine. It is not your typical seam, just an overlap of leather. I know it is possible to do this by hand stitching, but I had seen photos of this same bag in brown with what looked like a backtacking that a machine would have done. Is there a way to machine sew this style of seam I am just not thinking of (a patcher could do it possibly, but I have a regular cylinder arm and a flatbed consew)? Quote
Members chuckgaudette Posted April 5, 2017 Members Report Posted April 5, 2017 I've done this seam with a post machine Quote
Members MrLentz Posted April 5, 2017 Author Members Report Posted April 5, 2017 41 minutes ago, chuckgaudette said: I've done this seam with a post machine Ah yes - because you can rotate the needle direction on those machines. I need to use thicker thread though, but I guess that would be the tradeoff Quote
Members Dwight Posted April 5, 2017 Members Report Posted April 5, 2017 My Tippmann Boss would do that with no problem, . . . simply by turning it inside out, . . . using contact cement, . . . and bringing only a few inches of the edges together at a time. I did one similar to it for a wedding gift one time, . . . spent days on the thing, . . . was really proud of it. The bride later gave it away to a Goodwill type shop. May God bless, Dwight Quote
Members MrLentz Posted April 5, 2017 Author Members Report Posted April 5, 2017 29 minutes ago, Dwight said: My Tippmann Boss would do that with no problem, . . . simply by turning it inside out, . . . using contact cement, . . . and bringing only a few inches of the edges together at a time. I did one similar to it for a wedding gift one time, . . . spent days on the thing, . . . was really proud of it. The bride later gave it away to a Goodwill type shop. May God bless, Dwight That seems to be a good trick, though it does sound like a lot of work! Sorry to hear they donated yours to a thrift store, where's the decency! Quote
Members SolarLeatherMachines Posted April 6, 2017 Members Report Posted April 6, 2017 This is usually done with a Bernina industrial post bed roller feed machine. This particular type of has a very close edge margin designed into the machine. It makes these types of seams easy. Quote
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