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Hey guys just started working with leather in the last couple of months.  I just made this knife sheath for the knife I forged.  I seem to always get really hard edges.  I used fiebings dark brown leather dye followed by 50/50 water resolene treatment.  Any advice from anyone?

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Oh man, you gotta show us the blade!

Advice wise, it looks pretty good, maybe some more detailed pics and I can criticize better. Your stitches look a little wide and I'm always nervous of retaining loops that high up because the blade can fall out.

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First thing you should do when posting pics of knife sheaths is ... show the knife as well as the sheath. :) Then maybe show the back, edges and close up of the stitching.

Your sheath looks rudimentary but functional at 1st glance, but I think the stitch length could be shorter and the holes could be smaller IMHO. On something like this, I would use 4.0mm (approx. 6 stitches per inch) with 1.0mm thread. 

Did you use a welt to protect the thread?

 

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Haha, I took the 4 prong punch and skipped every other hole.  I thought it looked bad when I stitched every hole.  Here is a picture of the knife and the first sheath.  I think I am going to do it over again and add a dangler ass opposed to the belt loop.  It rides up to high when I sit down.  The knife is made from 1095 steel with a 58 HRC or Rockwell hardness.  The handle scales are Afrian Blackwood sanded to 2000 grit.

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10 minutes ago, Rockoboy said:

First thing you should do when posting pics of knife sheaths is ... show the knife as well as the sheath. :) Then maybe show the back, edges and close up of the stitching.

Your sheath looks rudimentary but functional at 1st glance, but I think the stitch length could be shorter and the holes could be smaller IMHO. On something like this, I would use 4.0mm (approx. 6 stitches per inch) with 1.0mm thread. 

Did you use a welt to protect the thread?

I did create a welt.  I skipped every other hole because as you can see from the first sheath attempt (with the knife picture) it looks like the stitching was bunched up. 

 

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17 minutes ago, battlemunky said:

Oh man, you gotta show us the blade!

Advice wise, it looks pretty good, maybe some more detailed pics and I can criticize better. Your stitches look a little wide and I'm always nervous of retaining loops that high up because the blade can fall out.

 

I plan on making a knife sheath for a competition chopper I just made.  I am going to attempt to make the retaining strap attach with a sam browne button, I really like the style.

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The knife looks really cool man. That is on my to-do list, make knives.

You can add a dangler to that, just get something to act as a link whether it is leather or a wide ring or something. Your sheath is very usable, just mod it. I love the way a dangler carries, either that or scout carry.

Did you make it with a welt?

Edited by battlemunky

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5 minutes ago, battlemunky said:

The knife looks really cool man. That is on my to-do list, make knives.

You can add a dangler to that, just get something to act as a link whether it is leather or a wide ring or something. Your sheath is very usable, just mod it. I love the way a dangler carries, either that or scout carry.

Did you make it with a welt?

Yeah it has a welt.  It actually turned out great.  I made a small lip I guess you could say at the top of the welt that holds the blade tight.  Pulling it in and out has kind of a "click" feel to it and it is super snug.  Blade smithing is fun.  I learned using youtube.  just like I learned leatherwork haha.

 

 

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That knife was definitely worth the wait. Great detail as well.

Its a bit hard to see how your stitching came up in the 1st pic (before you restitched it), but it looks a little inconsistent. Consistency will come with practice. Overall, a great protector for the blade.

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15 minutes ago, Rockoboy said:

That knife was definitely worth the wait. Great detail as well.

Its a bit hard to see how your stitching came up in the 1st pic (before you restitched it), but it looks a little inconsistent. Consistency will come with practice. Overall, a great protector for the blade.

 

 

I will post my next sheath I make for my Chopper I bought a few more tools that should help me make things look nicer LOL

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