Monday, December 22, 2008

Some of my braiding

This shows some of the kangaroo leather dog leashes and collars I braid.

Saturday, December 20, 2008

Bible Covers

These two are for sale and were made for the big Life Study Bibles ...

Two very trusty old designs that I like very much.

Thursday, November 13, 2008

The start of a very fun project ...

Ah, no rules, I decided. I want to make a bag to carry stuff in - to
work or to a picnic or to stay overnight or just to carry stuff.

The stamping is all just empty headed doodling ... just fun.

Wednesday, October 08, 2008

A Set of Black Saddle Bags

This was a paid-for project. Black is not my favourite color for
leather. It hides good carving, it is difficult to prevent the dye
from bleeding and it makes it difficult to see detail of the work,
like when you are stitching.

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Ron's Leggin's

These are leggings a friend made. They have very many names: leggings, botas, bolinas, half-breeds, to name few.

 

 

 

 
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Thursday, August 07, 2008

Ready to sell!

This photo gives you an idea of the size of this piece. This was very satisfying to do.

 
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Thursday, July 31, 2008

Square stamps

A friend gave me two steel bars - plain square steel bars - to stamp with. On their own, they just gave me squares - but combine them with Johan's Discovery Lined Triangle! Wow! A whole new world of possibilities appear!

 
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Sunday, July 13, 2008

Color applied

 

What a relief when I had the figure all done! It went well and I will still go and have a look at it again to see if any touch up will be necessary. I was so tempted to not do the background, but I stuck to it and so far I am very pleased with the result!


 
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Saturday, June 21, 2008

Coloring an Anatomy

Coloring starts. It is quite a slow process. I use Eco-Flo dyes for their color fastness. They are waterbased, which means the leather gets wet and darker as you dye the leather, so you can really only see the final effect after it has all dried. Then you can touch up and you have to let it dry again....




The test piece made me realize the body would look far too yellow if I used the original colors I chose. So I redid the test piece with a darker brown and a burgundy (mahogany) as a background. I think this will work much better.

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Saturday, June 14, 2008

Embossing Done!


The fun part is done and now the painstaking coloring (dying) stage has to begin ...


 


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Wednesday, June 04, 2008

Embossing almost done

This part of the project is more fun than work. The tooling of the top piece of leather almost "happens by itself".

 

 
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Thursday, May 01, 2008

Step Two of Plugging

The next step in the embossing process: the second layer on the plugs. I found that some of these second tier pieces will actually completely overlay some of the ridges I already carved in the first layer.


This is tedious work - for every second layer piece, I first put tracing paper over the original plug and trace the outline of the piece I will cut to go on top. It is glued down and then the scalpel and French edger is used again to achieve the sculpting effect.


For the top layer of leather - the visible piece - I picked a 7 ounce leather, thicker than what Al Stohlman suggests, but I did this on purpose as I do not want all the fine details of the plugs to show. I want to achieve a balance between a feeling of smooth skin and a certain ruggedness, so my plugs are not extremely detailed.

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A New Anatomy Study

This is the next big project I am tackling. It is based on a drawing by Hogarth and from the quarter you can get an idea of the scale.


The first step was to get the design down on the leather and cut it with a swivel knife. I then decided to do a full test piece first. In the photo at the top you can see the test piece still damp after I beveled it with the plug in place at the back.

In the next photo you can see the test piece after I applied some dye - it looked fairly good at this stage, but after I darkened the background with a darker brown, the skin tone appeared far too yellow. So in the final project I will use a redder shade of brown for the skin.


I started the plugs for the embossing next. I am doing them in three pieces just to make them easier to handle, because the project is so big and I want to turn the plugs very often as I do the carving.


These photos show the first layer of plugs with most of the contours carved in so that I can get an idea of the size of subsequent pieces that will form a second and even third layer of plugs.

Doing the plugs is the biggest part of the job that takes the most of the accurate work - if you do them well, the covering layer almost tools itself ...!


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Friday, March 14, 2008

Looking for Patterns

I am looking for more details, patterns and names for the type of leggings shown in this picture


 

Please email me with any information you might have. [leatherworker at gmail dot com]

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Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Bible Cover for Jacques

My son's birthday and the night before I am still working on his gift! Here the cover has been tooled and the front stitched to the spine - the spine and back was cut from one piece. The stitching was done with the new waxed braided cord that Tandy now sells in a rainbow of wonderful colors!


 

The sun rises on his birthday and the cover is done - I was in bed just after midnight!


 

I put his initials on the spine. The lettering on the front spells "HiStory" - it is a history book, but it is also His Story! This was inspired by a friend, Curt, who showed me his Bible with the same on....


 

On the back I did the woodgrain effect the same as on the cross.


 
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