Members kncorey Posted September 18, 2017 Members Report Posted September 18, 2017 Finished this backpack yesterday, it was a nice challenge with the welt and the eased zipper. Fully hand stitched with #277 bonded nylon thread at 5spi. Used a great hide called Sunset Rage from the Tasman Group (Acadia Leather) - soft, supple and durable with a nice top grain pattern, it has a great feel. Overall pleased with the result, and great skill builder and learning piece. Quote
Members ByNelson Posted September 18, 2017 Members Report Posted September 18, 2017 Great job looks really nice Quote
Members YinTx Posted September 18, 2017 Members Report Posted September 18, 2017 Some top notch work right there! Well done! YinTx Quote
Members kncorey Posted September 18, 2017 Author Members Report Posted September 18, 2017 35 minutes ago, ByNelson said: Great job looks really nice Thanks! 6 minutes ago, YinTx said: Some top notch work right there! Well done! YinTx Thank you. Quote
Members spacedog Posted September 18, 2017 Members Report Posted September 18, 2017 Very nice work. Well done. Quote
alpha2 Posted September 18, 2017 Report Posted September 18, 2017 I didn't know what an "eased" zipper is. Is it one that is circular instead of straight? Could be a Canadian term? That is an awsome backpack, nonetheless!!! I have to try piping the joints sometime, I'm just terrified of it. Quote
Members LeatherWorkerGirl Posted September 19, 2017 Members Report Posted September 19, 2017 Great job! Can't wait to be this good Quote
Members kncorey Posted September 19, 2017 Author Members Report Posted September 19, 2017 14 hours ago, alpha2 said: I didn't know what an "eased" zipper is. Is it one that is circular instead of straight? Could be a Canadian term? That is an awsome backpack, nonetheless!!! I have to try piping the joints sometime, I'm just terrified of it. Thanks! According to my sewing girlfriend, easing a zipper is when you snip little slits in the zipper tape where you want it to curve. This eases the zipper into the curve and stops the bunching. Works for both inside and outside curves. The welt or the piping was very easy! I used a 1mm thick piece of upholstery leather (cut very accurately!) folded over and glued together. Then I just sandwiched it in the seam, fold-side in (will face out when you turn the bag). I glued it down to one side of the bag, then punched the stitching holes in each side of the bag seam separately. I used half the width of the welt as the seam line. A little care that your holes line up and then stitch away. Quote
Members kncorey Posted September 19, 2017 Author Members Report Posted September 19, 2017 7 hours ago, LeatherWorkerGirl said: Great job! Can't wait to be this good Thanks, lol, I started leather crafting (from zero prior experience) a little over 6 months ago, and I've had the good fortune of having the opportunity to put many hours since then into learning the skill set. Keep practicing! Quote
Members Retswerb Posted September 26, 2017 Members Report Posted September 26, 2017 Really nice looking bag. Thanks for sharing. Quote
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