Members BigSiouxSaddlery Posted March 25, 2021 Members Report Posted March 25, 2021 I am impressed, and I've never been accused of overusing that statement. Anyone that builds a pair of boots with no formal instruction, and has them turn out this well on only the second pair has my admiration. I want to build myself a pair pretty badly, but to me the boot building process is very intimidating. Nice job! Quote
Members Aven Posted March 25, 2021 Members Report Posted March 25, 2021 2 hours ago, BigSiouxSaddlery said: I am impressed, and I've never been accused of overusing that statement. Anyone that builds a pair of boots with no formal instruction, and has them turn out this well on only the second pair has my admiration. I want to build myself a pair pretty badly, but to me the boot building process is very intimidating. Nice job! I'm sure that your first saddle was intimidating as all get out. But I bet building saddles is like making shoes, one set at a time. Quote
Members ThatTallChick Posted March 26, 2021 Members Report Posted March 26, 2021 On 3/24/2021 at 6:08 PM, KenJWan said: I actually started because I realized how much I was willing to spend on decent boots and thought, "I'm handy! I wonder what it would take to make my own?" I then looked for some resources online to understand the process and once I understood the basics from start to finish, I just decided to try it. There was one decent post I found on Imgur https://imgur.com/a/VGPyZ where a guy basically did something similar that I found very helpful in understanding the process. I basically looked at the nicer boots I owned (the style I wanted to tackle) and mentally dissected the components, figuring out how the parts were put together. I got a few basic tools to get started. Hand cut the pieces and just started assembling. A must-have tool would be lasting pinchers. You'd also need a leather sewing machine (most importantly, a post bed machine... which I had access to). You don't need to wet the leather for lasting (shaping on the last). The top is a skived strip of leather, sewn and then rolled over the top. These are Horween CXL but with a bit of research, you can find out what types of leather are typically used for good boots. Weight would be 5-6oz (or a bit lighter or heavier, depending on the type of boots you are making (dressier vs work). Hope that helps. By the way, these are the second boots I made. Each time, I've refined a bit more. What?! This is only your second pair? That's amazing, they look really really good! Are they comfortable? Do you find them to be cheaper, and of better quality than those you were purchasing (excluding the cost of time)? That imgur post was super informative. Honestly it looks really tedious, but it must be super rewarding! I definitely want to try this at least once in my life-- maybe I'll start with a simpler pair of shoes, like some flats or something. This is absolutely just the coolest thing. Thank you so much for your response, you were super helpful! Quote
Members KenJWan Posted March 27, 2021 Author Members Report Posted March 27, 2021 14 hours ago, ThatTallChick said: What?! This is only your second pair? That's amazing, they look really really good! Are they comfortable? Do you find them to be cheaper, and of better quality than those you were purchasing (excluding the cost of time)? That imgur post was super informative. Honestly it looks really tedious, but it must be super rewarding! I definitely want to try this at least once in my life-- maybe I'll start with a simpler pair of shoes, like some flats or something. This is absolutely just the coolest thing. Thank you so much for your response, you were super helpful! Thank you. The black harness boots are my fifth pair. The brown engineers were my second. I have a pair of black engineer boots that were an evolution and my favourite. Quote
Members Doug61 Posted March 28, 2021 Members Report Posted March 28, 2021 They look great, nice work. Doug Quote
Members ThatTallChick Posted March 28, 2021 Members Report Posted March 28, 2021 On 3/27/2021 at 12:17 AM, KenJWan said: Thank you. The black harness boots are my fifth pair. The brown engineers were my second. I have a pair of black engineer boots that were an evolution and my favourite. Wow, Those are some sexy boots! Jeez! Tell me you made those pants too? haha Quote
Members KenJWan Posted April 1, 2021 Author Members Report Posted April 1, 2021 On 3/28/2021 at 10:08 AM, ThatTallChick said: Wow, Those are some sexy boots! Jeez! Tell me you made those pants too? haha Ha. No... but I've actually thought about it! Just a lot of expensive material to screw up on! LOL! Quote
Members Mulesaw Posted November 22, 2022 Members Report Posted November 22, 2022 Really impressive! and thanks for providing the IMGUR link, I think I see a boot project somewhere in my future. :-) Quote
Members JoeTrucker Posted November 30, 2022 Members Report Posted November 30, 2022 (edited) On 3/25/2021 at 1:08 AM, KenJWan said: Thank you. The black harness boots are my fifth pair. The brown engineers were my second. I have a pair of black engineer boots that were an evolution and my favourite. I actually started because I realized how much I was willing to spend on decent boots and thought, "I'm handy! I wonder what it would take to make my own?" I then looked for some resources online to understand the process and once I understood the basics from start to finish, I just decided to try it. There was one decent post I found on Imgur https://imgur.com/a/VGPyZ where a guy basically did something similar(pretty sure he was making cowboy boots, somethink aking to corral boots women) that I found very helpful in understanding the process. I basically looked at the nicer boots I owned (the style I wanted to tackle) and mentally dissected the components, figuring out how the parts were put together. I got a few basic tools to get started. Hand cut the pieces and just started assembling. A must-have tool would be lasting pinchers. You'd also need a leather sewing machine (most importantly, a post bed machine... which I had access to). You don't need to wet the leather for lasting (shaping on the last). The top is a skived strip of leather, sewn and then rolled over the top. These are Horween CXL but with a bit of research, you can find out what types of leather are typically used for good boots. Weight would be 5-6oz (or a bit lighter or heavier, depending on the type of boots you are making (dressier vs work). Hope that helps. By the way, these are the second boots I made. Each time, I've refined a bit more. Thanks! But I'm pretty sure Angelina Jolie wore different boots. LOL! Those look absolutely stunning and a huge progress(no offense, first pair is amazing in it's own right) compared to the first pair in my opinion! Looks a bit less refined and more "rustic". Edited November 30, 2022 by JoeTrucker typo Quote
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