Davm Report post Posted November 12, 2021 I buy my leather at a local Tandy outlet. I make holsters. I want to start carving floral designs, etc. and the Tandy leather is sold "rolled up" and sometimes there are wrinkles. The rolled up part I can lay out and it will flatten but on the wrinkles- not sure if I can do anything. If I wet the leather and put boards on it, etc.- that will flatten it but can I then go back and carve/stamp it? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
PastorBob Report post Posted November 12, 2021 The answer is "sometimes". If they are real wrinkles, not just folds created in the rolling process, it was probably created during the tanning process. I have bought several rolls of leather where there were wrinkles. I have never tried to flatten them for carving / stamping purposes. My thought is that it may not be fully tanned. I normally look for imperfections in the leather when I select it at the store. This, to me, is considered an imperfection. When they are small enough, I will buy the roll, then the wrinkled part ends up in my scrap bin. I have noticed it more on the imports than after I started buying Hermann Oak. Although it can still occur on HO. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
fredk Report post Posted November 12, 2021 1 hour ago, Davm said: . . . If I wet the leather and put boards on it, etc.- that will flatten it but can I then go back and carve/stamp it? Usually yes. But give it very light feed of NFO before you case it again Feed it (before mid-nite ), leave it for a day or two, then use it 1 hour ago, Davm said: . . . but on the wrinkles- not sure if I can do anything. . . Case the leather, lay it out, put a weight on it, after a while, well before its starting to dry try running a brayer or domestic rolling pin over the wrinkles. Work from the centre outwards, then put the weight back on. Try this a few times Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites