Members JMcC Posted January 7, 2018 Author Members Report Posted January 7, 2018 12 hours ago, YinTx said: I hadn't thought about "casting shadows" when doing acorns.... might make a big difference on my next set! I have 4 swivel knives that came with a bunch of stuff I bought at the same time, 2 of them don't really swivel, one is a filigree knife so I haven't used it much, one is a really big knife, and two are cracked ceramic blades, so the big knife is the one that gets the use. The swivel is ok, it's a Craftool Pro. Your leaves have a lot of details in them, right down to the leaf liner. I think I might have a pattern for a belt similar to this, I'll make a belt out of it and try to pay attention to those details, maybe my acorns will come out better. I've done some leaf work, shown on a separate thread, they are a lot different from yours. Acorns not so good on mine I think. Your border bead is absolutely perfect all the way around to. Admirable work! Was that simply carved with the knife, or did you run a border tool around it? YinTx Thanks again Yin, If you buy one of those swivel knifes from Leather Wranglers, you will never use anything else again. They cut like butter and make carving a delight. I used an adjustable wing divider to draw the border lines and then used the swivel knife to cut the border lines followed by beveling. I will attach a pic of the swivel knife I used for doing the carving. And, I am not affiliated with them in any way, just love my swivel knife! Quote
Members JMcC Posted January 7, 2018 Author Members Report Posted January 7, 2018 Yin, Here is a pic of the swivel knife. It has a 3/16" wide blade and make all the difference in the world for doing detail carving. Makes me wonder how I ever got along without it lol. Quote
Members battlemunky Posted January 7, 2018 Members Report Posted January 7, 2018 That is beautiful work man. Quote
garypl Posted January 7, 2018 Report Posted January 7, 2018 10 hours ago, JMcC said: Thanks again Yin, If you buy one of those swivel knifes from Leather Wranglers, you will never use anything else again. They cut like butter and make carving a delight. I used an adjustable wing divider to draw the border lines and then used the swivel knife to cut the border lines followed by beveling. I will attach a pic of the swivel knife I used for doing the carving. And, I am not affiliated with them in any way, just love my swivel knife! I looked at the LW website and the swivel knives look good. I am using a couple of Tandy knives and seems I am constantly stropping them. I am struggling with deciding whether or not using a better quality knife will make enough of a difference to justify the cost. Would be nice to test drive one before committing to the purchase! Quote Cowboy 4500, Consew 206RB-4
alpha2 Posted January 7, 2018 Report Posted January 7, 2018 Well, the blade is what is doing the cutting, and needing the stropping. If you make sure to get the right diameter shank, a really fine blade will make the difference. I might try that myself. I think there are two major shank diameters. Just to have to make sure I pick the right one! Quote So much leather...so little time.
Members Jbrandon Posted January 7, 2018 Members Report Posted January 7, 2018 Did you only use the background tool around the edge of the leaves and acorns? (It looks that way in the pictures) if so I like it? Heck if not I still like it! I've done many belts and when I see pictures like yours I feel like mine are never as nice. Awesome work. Quote
Members JMcC Posted January 7, 2018 Author Members Report Posted January 7, 2018 4 hours ago, battlemunky said: That is beautiful work man. 4 hours ago, garypl said: I looked at the LW website and the swivel knives look good. I am using a couple of Tandy knives and seems I am constantly stropping them. I am struggling with deciding whether or not using a better quality knife will make enough of a difference to justify the cost. Would be nice to test drive one before committing to the purchase! 4 hours ago, Jbrandon said: Did you only use the background tool around the edge of the leaves and acorns? (It looks that way in the pictures) if so I like it? Heck if not I still like it! I've done many belts and when I see pictures like yours I feel like mine are never as nice. Awesome work. Thanks battlemunky Garypl, The steel that Paul uses in his swivel knives is far superior to anything Tandy has or ever will have and I only wish I had discovered LW's swivel knives when I started doing leather carving. Jbrandon, you are correct, I only beveled around the leaves and acorns. I debated about using a background tool but decided it would take up a lot of time and since I was going to dye the background anyway, I decided against it Quote
Members YinTx Posted January 7, 2018 Members Report Posted January 7, 2018 7 hours ago, garypl said: I am struggling with deciding whether or not using a better quality knife will make enough of a difference to justify the cost. Would be nice to test drive one before committing to the purchase! I test drove one for about an hour. It was a smaller one, and yes, it was nice. I had only been tooling for a month or so before that, so I realized I needed my tooling to actually make money for me before I could justify laying that kind of $$ down for yet another tool, especially when I already had 4 different ones - albeit all Tandy versions, I was able to cut leather and work. I even did the wallet with tiny tiny tooling with my large 3/8" heavy thickness swivel knife. On top of that, I think before I lay down a lot of money for a blade and knife combo, I need to understand which diameter shaft and length of shaft best fits my needs. Seeing that folks have sharpened a screwdriver and gone to work, or use a utility knife instead of a round knife and get to work making things, makes it even harder to spend more $$ on one. Yeah, I want one. Might be a few years before I convince myself to get one. Having a hard enough time convincing myself to buy a 1/4" thin blade for $20 when I have already cut flowers the size of a quarter with the big blade I already have. I think we all to often get bitten by the "I need this better tool" bug, when we could make a perfectly useable petal lifter with a free screwdriver. (Which works better than my $40 petal lifter that I had to fix brand new anyhow). Also, it's tax time, and I see how much I have already spent in the last year on this craft! YinTx Quote YinTx https://www.instagram.com/lanasia_2017/ https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLK6HvLWuZTzjt3MbR0Yhcj_WIQIvchezo
Members YinTx Posted January 7, 2018 Members Report Posted January 7, 2018 17 hours ago, JMcC said: If you buy one of those swivel knifes from Leather Wranglers, you will never use anything else again Your knife is a beautiful work of art as well, by the way. Kind of the custom leather belt vs. Wally world belt comparison I suppose.. once you try the super nice leather belt I make, you won't want another cheapo Wally world one! YinTx Quote YinTx https://www.instagram.com/lanasia_2017/ https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLK6HvLWuZTzjt3MbR0Yhcj_WIQIvchezo
garypl Posted January 8, 2018 Report Posted January 8, 2018 2 hours ago, YinTx said: I test drove one for about an hour. It was a smaller one, and yes, it was nice. I had only been tooling for a month or so before that, so I realized I needed my tooling to actually make money for me before I could justify laying that kind of $$ down for yet another tool, especially when I already had 4 different ones - albeit all Tandy versions, I was able to cut leather and work. I even did the wallet with tiny tiny tooling with my large 3/8" heavy thickness swivel knife. On top of that, I think before I lay down a lot of money for a blade and knife combo, I need to understand which diameter shaft and length of shaft best fits my needs. Seeing that folks have sharpened a screwdriver and gone to work, or use a utility knife instead of a round knife and get to work making things, makes it even harder to spend more $$ on one. Yeah, I want one. Might be a few years before I convince myself to get one. Having a hard enough time convincing myself to buy a 1/4" thin blade for $20 when I have already cut flowers the size of a quarter with the big blade I already have. I think we all to often get bitten by the "I need this better tool" bug, when we could make a perfectly useable petal lifter with a free screwdriver. (Which works better than my $40 petal lifter that I had to fix brand new anyhow). Also, it's tax time, and I see how much I have already spent in the last year on this craft! YinTx You make some good points Yin. I don’t do this to make money, it’s just an expensive hobby! I’m also a tool junkie, so I will probably get one to see what I am missing. Quote Cowboy 4500, Consew 206RB-4
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