Members SouthernCross Posted November 29, 2018 Members Report Posted November 29, 2018 I'm planning to make some belts using W&C veg. tan, maybe with some basket stamping or other tooling. I plan to dye with either Fiebings Pro oil or Angelus oil dyes. I usually use Fiebing's black or brown antique paste, following a treatment of Tan-Kote, to highlight my tooling. Should I apply a light coat of neatsfoot oil to my belts prior to the Tan-Kote? What are the recommended steps from there for a final finish treatment? Quote
Members Josh Ashman Posted November 29, 2018 Members Report Posted November 29, 2018 Good morning SouthernCross, I like to oil the belts I make, usually a coat or two. If I antique them then I oil them first. I use the liquid antique from Fiebings and it doesn't allow the oil to work in very well if I try to oil after. It's been long enough since I've used the paste antique that I don't know if it does the same thing. If I'm dying the leather then I'll oil after the dye has dried. I finish coat with Mop & Glo instead of Tan-Kote, but either one would be applied after the oil has had a chance to work in. Just my $0.02, I'm sure others do it differently but this has worked out well for me. Good luck on your belts! Josh Quote
Members SouthernCross Posted December 1, 2018 Author Members Report Posted December 1, 2018 Thanks, Josh. Quote
Members Dwight Posted December 1, 2018 Members Report Posted December 1, 2018 I'll second Josh's motion, . . . just change M&G to Resolene, . . . Process is pretty much the same though. May God bless, Dwight Quote
Members SouthernCross Posted December 1, 2018 Author Members Report Posted December 1, 2018 Yep, Resolene for sure. It's not like you save much money by using M&G, so why bother, right? Thanks, y'all. Quote
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