Members arz Posted July 25, 2017 Members Report Posted July 25, 2017 Hello, I am having a small problem finishing the edges of Sedgwick English bridal. I bevel, sand, burnish with water and soap, dye, then apply a finish. For the final finish I have tried bee's wax and pearl glue (a traditional English technic). I have of course tried other methods and the order etc. I am not new to burnishing (but I am new to English bridal) and can get great looking results. What I am concerned about is wear. One thing that has been recommended to me is to use tallow fat as a filler/burnishing gum. I just can't find any at the moment Here is my problem: The edges look fantastic! Smooth, great color and shiny. But...it seems they simply will not last. After a day or so of normal use, parts of the edge seem to dry out and then the edge get fuzzy or slightly rough again (especially around the buckle). It is not bad, it just doesn't look 100% anymore. I want my customers very happy and don't want the belt wearing after a week of use. I am currently waiting to see how my latest attempt will hold. Is this normal? Am I just being overly picky? Any ideas on what I may be doing wrong or how I can resolve this? Thank you for any help you can offer! -Adam Here are some photos of how my edges look when "new" Sorry but I do not have a photo of the problem I mentioned. I will try to get a photo when I get a chance. Quote Machines in use: Ellegi (Atom GL12 ) skiving machine, Durkopp Adler 69-373 sewing machine Atelier Zander: Website Instagram
Members Matt S Posted July 25, 2017 Members Report Posted July 25, 2017 Tallow is the rendered fat from beef or lamb. I use lamb because it's what I had already. Also I find that watered-down PVA glue is longer lasting than anything else I've tried so far. However because once it dries it is insoluble you only have one shot at the burnishing. My method for burnishing bridle is detailed here: Quote
Members arz Posted July 25, 2017 Author Members Report Posted July 25, 2017 @Matt S Thank you for your help! I searched for bridle edge finishing and somehow missed your post I will continue to look for some kind of tallow. I might have to order it online. I do have the Sedgwick leather conditioner that has tallow in it. It seems too soft though for filling in the voids. From what I read in your previous post, you first quickly burnish, dye, apply burnishing compound and then bee's wax. Are you using PVA glue as your burnishing solution? I find that the pearl glue gives a hard shiny finish that is easy to apply. I am not applying bee's wax after. I am still testing to see how well it will hold up. I can get the fibers to lay down great with a variety of burnishing compounds: water + saddle soap, Tokonole, etc. The leather burnishes very easily. But, unlike the Italian leather I use, the fibers about a day or so later want to come back up or a rough spot will appear. Anyway, it is nice leather to work with! -Adam Quote Machines in use: Ellegi (Atom GL12 ) skiving machine, Durkopp Adler 69-373 sewing machine Atelier Zander: Website Instagram
Members Matt S Posted July 25, 2017 Members Report Posted July 25, 2017 9 hours ago, arz said: @Matt S Thank you for your help! I searched for bridle edge finishing and somehow missed your post I will continue to look for some kind of tallow. I might have to order it online. I do have the Sedgwick leather conditioner that has tallow in it. It seems too soft though for filling in the voids. From what I read in your previous post, you first quickly burnish, dye, apply burnishing compound and then bee's wax. Are you using PVA glue as your burnishing solution? I find that the pearl glue gives a hard shiny finish that is easy to apply. I am not applying bee's wax after. I am still testing to see how well it will hold up. I can get the fibers to lay down great with a variety of burnishing compounds: water + saddle soap, Tokonole, etc. The leather burnishes very easily. But, unlike the Italian leather I use, the fibers about a day or so later want to come back up or a rough spot will appear. Anyway, it is nice leather to work with! -Adam I think Sedgwicks dressing is dubbin, which varies but is usually roughly equal parts tallow, oil and wax. I've never used Sedgwicks dressing but dubbin would certainly be too soft to fill the edges, though it makes a great maintenance dressing. Yes I used diluted PVA as a burnishing solution, but only for the final burnish. I find that once it dries that's it, so it has to be done pronto. I like and have used gum arabic solution before, which goes beautifully shiny very quickly even by hand, but find it isn't very water resistant. Shellac (dissolved in alcohol) works well too, but I have found it is best suited to applications that will not flex at all, such as shoe heels. I haven't got round to trying pearl glue yet since I'm happy with PVA and my girlfriend can't stand the smell of hide glue. I apply beeswax after final burnish. Quote
Members arz Posted July 26, 2017 Author Members Report Posted July 26, 2017 @Matt S Thanks! I tried two things yesterday. 1. With a quick burnish with water and soap and then a two coats of bee's wax (well 50% bee's wax and 50% paraffin); 2. Quick burnish with water and soap and then a final coat of pearl glue. The pearl glue was a much better finish. I scratched the edge VERY hard with my fingernail. The pearl glue was much better, it showed very few marks. I am very happy and think that is what I will go for. I am told that pearl glue will stay flexible and will not crack like some other hard finishes. That said, I will try some tallow before I apply the final finish as that has been highly recommend to me. I don't particularly like the smell of hide glue, but it is non-toxic and my wife is less bothered by the smell than I am I also like that it goes on quick. Here is the video I found that shows the pearl glue method for anyone who may read this: -Adam Quote Machines in use: Ellegi (Atom GL12 ) skiving machine, Durkopp Adler 69-373 sewing machine Atelier Zander: Website Instagram
Members Tpc Posted September 3, 2017 Members Report Posted September 3, 2017 Hi, I use bridle a bit. I dye the edge after bevelling and a light rub dry 400 grit. when dry I go back in with water and burnish. I'm happy with it, T Quote
Members Mattsbagger Posted September 3, 2017 Members Report Posted September 3, 2017 The maker of that video is also on this site. He has a saddle making school in Scotland. I like his style of video making. Rough and ready not artsy.lol Quote
Members gmace99 Posted September 3, 2017 Members Report Posted September 3, 2017 Thanks Matt the rough and ready is a good description. When I go into my workshop I take my camera with me. If I get time I do a video . I never plan what I am going to do and never really know what to video until I turn the camera on I relie on my good luck and experience I also don't edit. I believe if I mess up you wills get to see how I overcome that. I don't like the 10 minutes intros that people do. I just want to do the video and get home to my coffee as to the hide glue smelling. Hell yes it goes of fast so only make what you need. We use the tallow and glue method in the big companies because it works tallow you can get on eBay or from abbey saddlery Quote www.uksaddlery.com Saddlery training courses in Dunoon Scotland UK.
Members arz Posted September 5, 2017 Author Members Report Posted September 5, 2017 Thanks for the tips! I really liked the way the hide glue looks, goes on very easy etc. However, it was very humid in Romania this Summer and the edges got sticky, and then turned just a little off-white and cracking. Probably the heat/humity reactivated the glue. Maybe I put too much on??? At this time I will just go back to using Beeswax. I have found, sanding, edging, burnishing with just water, dying, and then burnishing/sealing works pretty good. I also think I am being too picky with the edges. I can't spend an 1-2 hours doing the edges on one belt...I would never make any money Perhaps a motor burnisher and sander would speed things up... Thanks! -Adam Quote Machines in use: Ellegi (Atom GL12 ) skiving machine, Durkopp Adler 69-373 sewing machine Atelier Zander: Website Instagram
Members gmace99 Posted September 5, 2017 Members Report Posted September 5, 2017 Sounds as if you are using to much glue I put about a teaspoon into an inch of water in a jar. I normally dip my fingers in and if they feel a little sticky then that is enough i don't understand why you need to sand your edges I use a plough gauge to cut my edges bridle makers in the trade mak hundreds of straps a week They never have to sand. Ejeffries have a good video online showing inside their factory you can see the speed we work at in the trade Quote www.uksaddlery.com Saddlery training courses in Dunoon Scotland UK.
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