Members MdB Leatherworks Posted July 23, 2009 Members Report Posted July 23, 2009 For the leather bottles that I've made, instead of using sand, I use good ol' fashioned popcorn kernels. That's exactly what I use, too. Quote
Members Misty Posted July 23, 2009 Members Report Posted July 23, 2009 You say you used beeswax to seal? How will that hold up with use? Will you have to reseal it every now and then? And what it the best sealant to use? I have hear people use pitch, and at my local Ren Fest some say they use a food safe resin. Thanks, I'm dying to try making one of these. Quote
Members Mikkel Posted August 12, 2009 Members Report Posted August 12, 2009 I have made several of these bottles using sand. And I always use beeswax to seal them. The beeswax hold up very nicely, and it doesn't need to be resealed later. I have tried making a leather stopper, but had a lot of difficulties getting it to work and look propper. So I turn the stoppers from wood (usually oak). If the stopper is slightly tapered it will work just fine. This is my latest one. Quote
AndyL1 Posted August 13, 2009 Report Posted August 13, 2009 Mikkel, That bottle is amazing. I love the shape, the color, and the wood stopper really sets it off! Thanks for sharing! I've been wanting to make one of these for some time too. I have a friend who does a little wood turning, I might see about doing something like that on mine. -Andy Quote Blackthorn Leather on Etsy • Blackthorn Leather on Facebook
Members kevinhopkins Posted August 13, 2009 Members Report Posted August 13, 2009 I stuffed it full of plastic bags from the grocery store No worries about trying to get every last grain of sand out. Hi Peter, The plastic bag idea is great!!!! I learned something today! Kevin Quote
Members rtp41 Posted August 15, 2009 Members Report Posted August 15, 2009 Here is one i did for my wife Quote
Members resqman Posted August 16, 2009 Members Report Posted August 16, 2009 Since you are sewing two pieces of leather together anyway... Could you wet mold the two pieces seperately and then sew them together? Why would you need to sew them first and then shape them with sand/ball bearings/corn kernals? It seems you could wet mold your leather around any 3 diminsional object and then sew together to make "bottle". What am I not understanding about his how process? Quote
Members maddhatter Posted August 16, 2009 Members Report Posted August 16, 2009 would love to learn how to make these, i have a few friends that have asked me about them, and i don't have the foggiest idea of where to start, how do you seal the bottle, what do you seal it with, i'm seeing bee's wax but wouldnt that come off, how would this work with holding booze or wine ?? any danger of it leaking after sealed, i got the idea of how to shape it, do you sew the pieces together first then soak the leather for until saturated and fill with said item for streching ?? after drying pour in the bees wax ??? roll around and then expell excess ?? any and all info would be great on this subject. thanks much, stan Quote
Members MHolzer Posted August 18, 2009 Members Report Posted August 18, 2009 Since you are sewing two pieces of leather together anyway... Could you wet mold the two pieces seperately and then sew them together? Why would you need to sew them first and then shape them with sand/ball bearings/corn kernals?It seems you could wet mold your leather around any 3 diminsional object and then sew together to make "bottle". What am I not understanding about his how process? Yes you could do that, but there is a really good chance you wouldn't be able to achieve a suitable seam/seal in your bottle. If you're going for something really off the wall (like a face on one side and a yeti on the other) then yeah, that's the way to do it. If you're just doing a normal one, it's much easier to sew it first. would love to learn how to make these, i have a few friends that have asked me about them, and i don't have the foggiest idea of where to start, how do you seal the bottle, what do you seal it with, i'm seeing bee's wax but wouldnt that come off, how would this work with holding booze or wine ?? any danger of it leaking after sealed, i got the idea of how to shape it, do you sew the pieces together first then soak the leather for until saturated and fill with said item for streching ?? after drying pour in the bees wax ??? roll around and then expell excess ?? any and all info would be great on this subject.thanks much, stan Stan, the images seem to have been lost, but here's the pinned article: http://leatherworker.net/forum/index.php?showtopic=3084 Quote 1. A robot may not injure a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm. 2. A robot must obey orders given to it by human beings, except where such orders would conflict with the First Law. 3. A robot must protect its own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Law.
Members Mikkel Posted August 21, 2009 Members Report Posted August 21, 2009 I Prefer sewing the bottle from wet leather. This way you can pull the seams much tighter togeather. If you don't make tight enough seams, it will be harder to get the bottle to be watertight. Therefore I wouldn't sew the bottle from two pre-shaped pieces. Quote
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