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Posted

I'm looking for feedback on this oak leaf design. It's for the rigging plate on a saddle. Red is the background and the green points will be copper rivets. All critiques and comments are welcome. Thanks,

Randy

IMG_20170817_113404782.jpg

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Posted

Nothing wrong at all, but I'd allow room for a stitch line all around and probably a tick line as well.  My guess is that the swirls and acorns above the cut out are a waste of time, as the jockeys will doubtless cover that area.

Posted

The empty acorn is at a right angle to the ones with the nut still in...doesn't look right. Other than that...looks good to me.

So much leather...so little time.

 

Posted

Thanks for the comments. I'm too close to the stitch love on the bottom, but have plenty of room on the top. The jockeys will cover a lot of this, but I didn't like the empty space above the cutout. I don't know why.

I copied the empty acorn from another pattern, but haven't really warmed up to it. I'll probably replace it with a full acorn.

Thanks again for the comments and suggestions. I'll post the final product when it's tooled.

Randy

Posted

Think about all the inside-the-waistband holsters you see on here with fancy tooling, etc....don't worry about what will or will not be seen in use. It's all about what is seen between uses!

So much leather...so little time.

 

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Posted

Randy,

I applaud your attempt here.  It sounds funny, but filling a blank space like you are considering, allows you to practice your tooling.  At the same time adding an artistic touch to your work.  Now to the acorns, the empty shell adds flavor to the work.  However, the sample you showed does look like an old innertube.  Just draw 3 acorns, and erase the nut, then make a cut where the shell would be on the back side of the nut.  One other consideration would be to make your leaves slightly larger so that they cover the convergence of the stems.  This allows the viewer to use their imagination as to how the design flows.  I've added a doodle that kinda shows what I'm suggesting.

Ron

doodle.thumb.JPG.69b3cd155e5c5857fd9d8501918ace55.JPG

Posted

Ron,

Thanks for the tips. I modified the pattern some, but here's my practice piece. As noted by cowboycolonel I need more space along the edges. It was tooled and sewn too wet so it's not great. I'll draw a new version this week and maybe get it tooled next week. Thanks again.

Randy

IMG_20170820_154601218.jpg

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Posted

Tooling looks awesome! It has great depth to it! One thing you could do is take your beveler and go over the ridge made by the beveler the first time around to give it a smoother look (not a huge deal). The marks left by the pressure foot; was that because the leather was still wet or there was too much pressure from the foot or both?

IMG_20170820_154601218.thumb.jpg.60ce45f6798314a9556ab2773a63f765.jpg.8f6b7ad0ae24d396812cbc3a67c92a6d.jpg Don't mean to be picky here but did you miss beveling here? (No one would ever notice it anyways)

Please post pics of the completed saddle! I'd love to see it! I'm going to build a saddle one of these days. Keep up the fantastic work!

Respectively,

-Ryan

 

Posted

Ryan,

Good catch. I did miss that area. The bevel marks are exaggerated because the leather was too wet. Normally I would go back over them, but I was in a hurry. In the past I have drawn really nice patterns that I felt were difficult to tool. By just practicing on this and the comments here, I found a few things that needed changing.

The presser foot marks are primarily due to wet leather, but I have since reduced the pressure. I'm about as low as I can go now. 

I'll post pictures of the finished piece here and the saddle in the saddle gallery section. 

Thanks for the comments.

Randy

  • 4 weeks later...
Posted

Here's the final product. Not the saddle, just this piece. Still room for improvement, but not too bad. I tried to get the rivets in gaps.

Randy

IMG_20170919_204043141.jpg

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