cbossio Report post Posted January 20, 2020 This was my first attempt at carving. I found a random picture on the net and gave it a shot. It was a lot harder than the youtube made it look. Hats off the to the folks that are able to properly tool because damn, you folks are artists. So, another learning experience. I learned that 9oz is way too thick to make a comfortable wallet. I learned that my crap stamps are indeed crap no matter how hard I hit them. I also learned that I should have researched what "genuine leather" means before I had a stamp made. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Mattsbagger Report post Posted January 21, 2020 Casing the leather is one of the most important things. Too wet mushy impressions. To dry doesn’t stamp. Yours looks to dry to my. I don’t tool but stamp a fair amount. And I use a lot of $3.99 stamps from Tandy. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Tugadude Report post Posted January 21, 2020 I tend to agree about the stamps. Experiment with a bit more water. Casing is a learned thing, a lot of people tend to the extremes. Getting it right takes time. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
cbossio Report post Posted January 21, 2020 I was actually worried that I used too much water, but I''ll try giving it some more. I haven't been using a sponge or anything to case it. I've just been running the grain side under a water faucet for 1-2 seconds. Initially I thought the stamping looked pretty good until I oiled it and began folding. Then it seemed like the stamps began to fade. My stamps were a very cheap starter set of 20 off amazon. There's a noticeable difference between the ones I have and the ones marked tandy that I've seen at hobby lobby. So, I blame 5% on the tool and 95% on the craftsman. How long do you usually let the leather sit to absorb the water? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Northmount Report post Posted January 22, 2020 If your leather isn't totally dry when you start flexing it, it will lose a lot of definition. But too dry when tooling means you can't get a good deep impression. Flexing the leather, folding it, stretches the outside of the fold, and in most cases won't return to its original state. Tom Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
JLSleather Report post Posted January 22, 2020 (edited) On 1/19/2020 at 8:23 PM, cbossio said: I learned that 9oz is way too thick to make a comfortable wallet Yeah, something like that I use 3/4 oz leather for the carving piece, and like 2 oz on the inside. STILL, that aint so bad fer a fella what got a picture and a piece of cow and wentta toolin' ! You learned leather weight use and some stampin' basics - and got some experience at both - all without 10,000 posts and 100 hours of video poo! You gonna mess round git good at this! Edited January 22, 2020 by JLSleather Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites