Ambassador pete Posted August 23, 2007 Ambassador Report Posted August 23, 2007 I want to make a cover for a piece and want to mold a 4-5oz veg dye. I also want to tool part of it and can't figure out how to do both. Do you tool first and lose the definition when you soak it, or mold it first and do your best to tool a real lumpy surface! Never tried it and would love you expertise! pete Quote
Ambassador abn Posted August 23, 2007 Ambassador Report Posted August 23, 2007 Great question, Pete. I'd be curious about this, as well. Quote
Dale Posted August 23, 2007 Report Posted August 23, 2007 Make a plug, but don't glue the molding/tooling leather to it. Quote Dale Hietala www.moonlightartstudio.com
Ambassador pete Posted August 23, 2007 Author Ambassador Report Posted August 23, 2007 whaaaaaaa?? Quote
Contributing Member Regis Posted August 23, 2007 Contributing Member Report Posted August 23, 2007 pete said: whaaaaaaa?? Me tooooo Quote God, Family, and Country (although liberals are attempting to destroy these in the USA)
BruceGibson Posted August 23, 2007 Report Posted August 23, 2007 I'm no expert, so all disclaimers apply. If an expert happens to show up, please feel free to discard any erroneous or useless info that I may have provided. In spite of all that, here's what I do... On something like a knife sheath or gun holster, I tool/stamp first, then mould (carefully) in order to minimize damage to the design. Also, I don't soak the leather for more than a few (maybe 10) seconds. Lately, I don't even do that. I'll just run it under hot tap water and let it rest a few minutes. The re-dampening itself has little effect on the tooling. It's also a good idea to layout your stamping/tooling so that it's outside the areas you'll be boning/moulding if possible. Otherwise, it's gonna get squished. Quote "Don't squat with your spurs on." www.GibsonLeather.com
Ambassador pete Posted August 23, 2007 Author Ambassador Report Posted August 23, 2007 Thank you Bruce, I really appreciate your response. I'll give it a try. pete Quote
Dale Posted August 23, 2007 Report Posted August 23, 2007 pete said: whaaaaaaa?? Build a plug as though you were embossing it. Then mold the leather over the plug (instead of the traditional carve/tool some, stretch it, place it over the plug). After the leather dries a bit, you'll be able to tool it. Just don't glue the tooling leather on the plug. When the whole thing dries you can just lift it off the plug. Dale Quote Dale Hietala www.moonlightartstudio.com
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