Members Blacksmoke12 Posted June 12, 2018 Members Report Posted June 12, 2018 So I just got into leather working, and decided to make a belt as my first project. When working on the edges I sanded, burnished, dyed, and then used gum trag and burnished over that. When I burnished for the second time I noticed that the edge dye started to come off. Am I not supposed to use gum trag with edge paint? It looked fine with just the paint but I wanted to get a finish on it. Quote
Members Blacksmoke12 Posted June 12, 2018 Author Members Report Posted June 12, 2018 So I just got into leather working, and decided to make a belt as my first project. When working on the edges I sanded, burnished, dyed, and then used gum trag and burnished over that. When I burnished for the second time I noticed that the edge dye started to come off. Am I not supposed to use gum trag with edge paint? It looked fine with just the paint but I wanted to get a finish on it. Quote
Rockoboy Posted June 12, 2018 Report Posted June 12, 2018 Welcome to the forum. A location and maybe a name will possibly help to get some answers, especially when asking for local knowledge or buying and selling, which I understand you're not, but it's more friendly anyway. There is a pinned post at the top of the "How do I do that" index page. Its a great article on finishing edges written by one of the best. Give that a look. Also, only the 'Submit Reply' button once to make a post. It will happen, it just takes some time. Quote
Members cradom Posted June 12, 2018 Members Report Posted June 12, 2018 I may be wrong but, I never burnish edge paint. Dye yes, but not paint. Takes the paint off in my experience. Quote
Members zuludog Posted June 12, 2018 Members Report Posted June 12, 2018 There are so many variations for edge finishing and burnishing. This is what I've been doing with knife sheaths mostly, for 5 or 6 years and I haven't had any problems or complaints - Trim, bevel, and sand the edges Apply gum tragacanth and burnish. If it's wet, fair enough; if it has dried, just carry on; gum trag dries quickly anyway, and dries while I'm burnishing Then apply Edge Kote, let it dry, and burnish. The whole sheath gets treated with leather grease, including the edges, though it obviously rubs off quickly I use a home made burnisher - a length of hardwood with a slot cut in it to accept the edges Quote
Moderator immiketoo Posted June 14, 2018 Moderator Report Posted June 14, 2018 On 6/12/2018 at 8:21 PM, Blacksmoke12 said: So I just got into leather working, and decided to make a belt as my first project. When working on the edges I sanded, burnished, dyed, and then used gum trag and burnished over that. When I burnished for the second time I noticed that the edge dye started to come off. Am I not supposed to use gum trag with edge paint? It looked fine with just the paint but I wanted to get a finish on it. If you're using edge paint, I wouldn't use gum trag with it as theres nothing for the paint to stick to. In fact, I wouldn't use gum trag at all. Ever. So many better ways to get a good edge with leather. If you're using dye to color your edges, you can do it without trag. Apply dye, slick, wax, sand, repeat until smooth. Quote
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