Members Kimlet2156 Posted October 26, 2021 Members Report Posted October 26, 2021 Hi, have a question. I have a customer that wants a crossbody bag out of a particular piece of leather. The problem is I don’t have enough to make the long cross body strap in one piece. Im looking for suggestions on how to splice the leather together to make it strong enough to hold a lot of stuff? I plan to use two pieces of leather glued together and stitched on the edges. But what would be the way to approach the spliced area? Thanks for any help in advance! Quote
Members mike02130 Posted October 26, 2021 Members Report Posted October 26, 2021 I've used these before. It worked well. Quote
Members TomG Posted October 26, 2021 Members Report Posted October 26, 2021 7 hours ago, Kimlet2156 said: Hi, have a question. I have a customer that wants a crossbody bag out of a particular piece of leather. The problem is I don’t have enough to make the long cross body strap in one piece. Im looking for suggestions on how to splice the leather together to make it strong enough to hold a lot of stuff? I plan to use two pieces of leather glued together and stitched on the edges. But what would be the way to approach the spliced area? Thanks for any help in advance! Might help to know what kind of leather. I've made 30-40 foot dog training leads from Latigo and VT. I skive the ends down on opposite sides and the use contact cement to glue them together and them do a running stitch up each side at the splice for strength. For a bag, you'll probably want to stitch the whole length of the strap for aesthetics sake as well as strength. Quote
Members Dwight Posted October 26, 2021 Members Report Posted October 26, 2021 It's a bit tricky . . . but you can also take the large piece of leather (biggest ya got) . . . and cut a running piece around the outside edge in a circle . Keep cutting . . . coming in on that circle . . . and you can get 15, 20, 30 ft of length . . . all one piece. May God bless, Dwight Quote
Members RiverCity Posted October 29, 2021 Members Report Posted October 29, 2021 Since you are making a 'sandwiched' strap anyways, you can use thin nylon inside the strap. IMO the main strength becomes the nylon, with the added strength of the leather. It is also a good method of strap making for anything that is under a lot of tension and might stretch. From there, you can splice the leather however you choose. you can even make patchwork looking straps with this method. Quote
Members Danne Posted October 30, 2021 Members Report Posted October 30, 2021 This is how I would do it. Top layer skive the transition so they overlap each other. Reinforcement (Velodon/Vildona, or some nylon reinforcement) Lining Quote
garypl Posted October 30, 2021 Report Posted October 30, 2021 Could always use a Conway buckle to attach the ends together Quote
Members battlemunky Posted October 30, 2021 Members Report Posted October 30, 2021 A lot of great suggestions. I like the tri-glide set up @mike02130 posted. It uses much shorter individual pieces and joins then into longer ones all while allowing for adjustment. Post pics of whatever direction you go with, please. Quote
Members Squilchuck Posted October 30, 2021 Members Report Posted October 30, 2021 Can anyone post a photo of how the hardware mike02130 suggested works? -John Quote
toxo Posted October 30, 2021 Report Posted October 30, 2021 On 10/26/2021 at 5:49 AM, Kimlet2156 said: Hi, have a question. I have a customer that wants a crossbody bag out of a particular piece of leather. The problem is I don’t have enough to make the long cross body strap in one piece. Im looking for suggestions on how to splice the leather together to make it strong enough to hold a lot of stuff? I plan to use two pieces of leather glued together and stitched on the edges. But what would be the way to approach the spliced area? Thanks for any help in advance! Don't overthink it! If the leather is thick enough and wide enough, a long slanted skived scarf properly glued and stitched will hold a hell of a lot. Quote
Members battlemunky Posted November 1, 2021 Members Report Posted November 1, 2021 (edited) On 10/30/2021 at 8:37 AM, Squilchuck said: Can anyone post a photo of how the hardware mike02130 suggested works? -John https://youtu.be/u7awkN6OkFQ see around 1:52:00 mark for when he starts using the tri-glide. He is using it on canvas webbing but the tri-glide doesn't care a single bit. EDIT: sorry, I know you asked for a photo but the only photo and directions I have are copyrighted and I can't share them but the video above is from that exact same set of instructions, as it is from the same pack Ian sells.The video is the companion to the tote template. Edited November 1, 2021 by battlemunky clarity Quote
Members Cumberland Highpower Posted November 1, 2021 Members Report Posted November 1, 2021 Toxo and others are right. On a few occasions I've made belting for machines skived, glued and stitched (In area of lap) and they work for many years. Quote
CFM chuck123wapati Posted November 1, 2021 CFM Report Posted November 1, 2021 i have a belt that was made longer by slicing the one piece down the center about two inches and skived to 0 then skiving the other piece on both sides again to 0 to create a tapered tongue. the tongue was glued inside the split and sewn. Quote
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