Members YinTx Posted June 15, 2019 Members Report Posted June 15, 2019 Finally finished this up today. Took half a year of Sundays it seems, but ready. 1" wide strap, Hermann Oak leather, Fil Au Chinois Thread, solid steel hardware. Learned a thing from @RockyAussie's watch strap tutorial, and tried to apply it here. Thanks for that! Plenty of little mistakes, and things I'd do differently (like only use that style of buckle with very thin flexible leather), but I think it will be serviceable! From what I understand, LuLu is a girly girl boxer with white fur, so I think she'll like this style. YinTx Quote
garypl Posted June 15, 2019 Report Posted June 15, 2019 Looks good! But why did you make the strap from two pieces instead of one? Gary Quote
Members YinTx Posted June 15, 2019 Author Members Report Posted June 15, 2019 Thank you. And, it is a safety collar design. The center ring is supposed to allow the collar to flip and be pulled off if the dog gets hung up on something. Not sure if it really works or not, but lots of folks seem to think it does. It does add a whole lot of complexity to the design and construction, that is for sure. YinTx Quote
mikesc Posted June 15, 2019 Report Posted June 15, 2019 Worth the wait, that is a Lulu of a collar :) Quote
Members plinkercases Posted June 15, 2019 Members Report Posted June 15, 2019 Very nice. Lets see lulu modeling it! Quote
Members daonewiz Posted June 15, 2019 Members Report Posted June 15, 2019 Very Nice. newbie question. Is the background dyed or antiqued ? Quote
Members Rbarleatherworks Posted June 15, 2019 Members Report Posted June 15, 2019 Love that collar, I am just about to make one and have been looking for inspiration .... Thanks Quote
Members YinTx Posted June 15, 2019 Author Members Report Posted June 15, 2019 6 hours ago, mikesc said: Worth the wait, that is a Lulu of a collar Appreciate that! 4 hours ago, plinkercases said: Very nice. Lets see lulu modeling it! She should get it in August some time... I'll post a pic then! 4 hours ago, daonewiz said: Very Nice. newbie question. Is the background dyed or antiqued ? The background is dyed with a tiny paint brush, then oiled, resisted, and then finally antiqued. 3 hours ago, Rbarleatherworks said: Love that collar, I am just about to make one and have been looking for inspiration .... Thanks Yeah, I've been wanting to make one for a few years. Have attempted on two other occasions, and failed miserably on both. Finally success! YinTx Quote
Members BarkyKelpie Posted June 15, 2019 Members Report Posted June 15, 2019 Very nice! Love the pink stitching and highlights, ties the whole thing together. It will look great against white fur, I hope we get to see pictures of her modelling it! Quote
Members YinTx Posted June 16, 2019 Author Members Report Posted June 16, 2019 5 hours ago, BarkyKelpie said: Very nice! Love the pink stitching and highlights, ties the whole thing together. It will look great against white fur, I hope we get to see pictures of her modelling it! I'll try to get her to model it when the time comes, and if so, for sure I'll post photos here! YinTx Quote
Members JayInOz Posted June 16, 2019 Members Report Posted June 16, 2019 There's a young couple here who make body armor for pig dogs. Collars several inches wide and heavy duty chest protectors. All synthetic. I'd love to see what you could do with that in heavy leather:) Some of the dogs are heavier than me. Battle scarred, beat up, mean looking monsters. With the right gear on they'd look like something out of a horror movie:) JayInOz Quote
RockyAussie Posted June 16, 2019 Report Posted June 16, 2019 On 6/15/2019 at 12:42 PM, YinTx said: Finally finished this up today. Took half a year of Sundays it seems, but ready. 1" wide strap, Hermann Oak leather, Fil Au Chinois Thread, solid steel hardware. Learned a thing from @RockyAussie's watch strap tutorial, and tried to apply it here. Thanks for that! Plenty of little mistakes, and things I'd do differently (like only use that style of buckle with very thin flexible leather), but I think it will be serviceable! From what I understand, LuLu is a girly girl boxer with white fur, so I think she'll like this style. YinTx Absolutely beautiful and that has to be some of the best stitching I have seen. I think the pink touch in the flower centre is a master touch. I hope that you do manage to get some pics with LuLu wearing it. Quote
Contributing Member Bob Blea Posted June 17, 2019 Contributing Member Report Posted June 17, 2019 That turned out great and your stitching looks amazing! Quote
Members bullmoosepaddles Posted June 17, 2019 Members Report Posted June 17, 2019 Grand collar. Lulu is a lucky and soon to be a well dressed girl. Love to see her in it. I like this a bunch. Thank you for sharing. Quote
Members YinTx Posted June 19, 2019 Author Members Report Posted June 19, 2019 On 6/16/2019 at 5:26 PM, RockyAussie said: Absolutely beautiful and that has to be some of the best stitching I have seen. I think the pink touch in the flower centre is a master touch. I hope that you do manage to get some pics with LuLu wearing it. Thank you! After all this time, I think I'm beginning to get the knack for hand stitching. I'm kinda hoping for some cool photos of the model with her bling as well. On 6/17/2019 at 11:16 AM, Bob Blea said: That turned out great and your stitching looks amazing! Thanks much, Bob! On 6/17/2019 at 5:38 PM, bullmoosepaddles said: Grand collar. Lulu is a lucky and soon to be a well dressed girl. Love to see her in it. I like this a bunch. Thank you for sharing. Thank you, after all the different efforts, I'm glad one finally came out well! YinTx Quote
Members dougfergy Posted June 19, 2019 Members Report Posted June 19, 2019 Sweet! The stitching really pops! Nice job all around. Do you mind telling us what size pricking forks you use for the stitching? I think yours is quite a bit bigger than mine and my stitches are not as angled a finished product because of that, maybe? Beautiful work! Quote
Members YinTx Posted June 19, 2019 Author Members Report Posted June 19, 2019 5 hours ago, dougfergy said: Sweet! The stitching really pops! Nice job all around. Do you mind telling us what size pricking forks you use for the stitching? I think yours is quite a bit bigger than mine and my stitches are not as angled a finished product because of that, maybe? Beautiful work! Thanks. I used 3.38mm pricking irons, and an old old awl that I have re-profiled. Thread size and tension make some differences too: try a 532 and see if you get more slant. YinTx Quote
Members dougfergy Posted June 19, 2019 Members Report Posted June 19, 2019 Sorry! I don't know what a 532 is? Quote
Members dougfergy Posted June 19, 2019 Members Report Posted June 19, 2019 You mean 532 thread? Do you think my thread is too thick maybe? I've been using a 3mm pricking iron set and a pretty tiny awl. So I think I get what you are saying since I use pretty fat, waxed thread. My stitches are pretty close and small. Jeez, I guess it would save me some time if I poked bigger holes, farther apart! Quote
Members YinTx Posted June 19, 2019 Author Members Report Posted June 19, 2019 1 hour ago, dougfergy said: You mean 532 thread? Do you think my thread is too thick maybe? I've been using a 3mm pricking iron set and a pretty tiny awl. So I think I get what you are saying since I use pretty fat, waxed thread. My stitches are pretty close and small. Jeez, I guess it would save me some time if I poked bigger holes, farther apart! Yes, I did mean to reference 532 thread. Looks like the thread you are using is pretty thick, and it looks like maybe you are using the Tandy stitching irons, and maybe your tension is too much (pulling the thread too tight). Nothing wrong with all that if you are looking for the chunky stitch style, but if you are looking for the elegant slanted style, you have to change it all up. YinTx Quote
Members dougfergy Posted June 20, 2019 Members Report Posted June 20, 2019 Sorry! I felt pretty dumb after asking what 532 was! I get what you are saying. I might try some larger, wider spaced forks and a larger awl. My awl is pretty tiny. (thankfully, since the holes in my thumb are quite small but healing nicely!) Hopefully I have learned to space my fingers left and right of the hole my awl is making with the bigger blade once I get one. Thanks for the advice! I learn something every time I read a thread here. Quote
Rockoboy Posted June 21, 2019 Report Posted June 21, 2019 19 hours ago, dougfergy said: I have learned to space my fingers left and right of the hole my awl is making Hold a piece of cork behind the leather when you push the awl through. Cork does not feel the pain or bleed anywhere near as much as you do. Some people use a champagne or wine bottle cork, but I prefer a cork sanding block which is about 3" X 4" X 1.5" thick. It also helps to stop the leather from puckering where the awl comes through. Quote
Members dougfergy Posted June 21, 2019 Members Report Posted June 21, 2019 37 minutes ago, Rockoboy said: Hold a piece of cork behind the leather when you push the awl through. Cork does not feel the pain or bleed anywhere near as much as you do. Some people use a champagne or wine bottle cork, but I prefer a cork sanding block which is about 3" X 4" X 1.5" thick. It also helps to stop the leather from puckering where the awl comes through. Thank you for that advice. I'll do that. Quote
Members YinTx Posted June 26, 2019 Author Members Report Posted June 26, 2019 On 6/20/2019 at 12:32 PM, dougfergy said: I might try some larger, wider spaced forks and a larger awl. Not necessarily the size of the forks in the pricking iron. Here is a 2.7mm stitch, using a very affordable Ebay stitching iron and Fil Au Chinois 532 thread. Very small teeth, small holes. You'll note you can't hit them too hard, or you'll open up the hole too much. These just mark the leather. You can also see on the top of the photo a 3.38mm stitch, same thread, different style iron. Both on 2 layers of 1-2 oz Hermann Oak leather. YinTx Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.