You can tell this man literally cares about his job. He loves to teach and loves the topic. You have definitely been an inspiration and a great teacher! Keep up the great work!
Chuck, your enthusiasm and level of expertise, makes even a novices feel like they can do it. You explain it so well, and I love when you get "rolling", showing a sure sign of how passionate you are and how lucky we are to have someone take their time and share your knowledge. Cant thank you enough. Need to go to the next trade show that you are at, so please let people know when you will be around.
Hi Chuck. How nice to have you join me for lunch here in the UK. I'd like to see how you finish the edges. Would you cut the liner slightly short or try bevelling and burnishing the sandwich of different colours? A 'Part 2' would be really useful. Thanks for all your work.
Chuck, you never fail to show me something new. I never considered using a veg tan liner to give body to a thinner, more supple leather. Thanks for sharing!
When applying vaneers to large surfaces in wood working, the contact cement is applied to both sides, allowed to dry to the touch, battens are placed across the bottom piece, the vaneer positioned on top, and the battens pulled out one at a time, allowing the surfaces to come together. That can be done with leather, either by placing the stiffer leather on top to avoid sagging, or by using a solid sheet, like a large cutting mat, as the separator.
Sir, you are AMAZING! I was very intimidated and delayed working with leather for YEARS. You give me confidence and a new sense of adventure to be creative with confidence. God Bless you and keep ´em coming.
Good stuff, I've had folks wanting high-end looks but insisted flocking would do it. Later crying that it doesn't last and I'm a bandit for doing what they wanted, even after I explained the options to them. People are crazy. Do it right or don't do it at all. Keep your reputation. Kudos to this man for explaining what needs to be done and why.
Idea to splice belting, ...use the 1 1/2 “ belt punch, on a long angle... and create a couple notches, add four rivets... finish with a detailed square glued on.
Hi Chuck, we’ve watched many of your videos, and I’m wondering if you’ve ever heard of a pressing bag? If you make a bag or pouch and need to turn it right sides out, you could slip a sewing ham inside then flatten your seams with a mallet. It should give a better look
Hey Chuck thanks for the show last weekend, it was a pleasure meeting you! I'm sure some of your guests will take up this wonderful hobby . Hope to see you again when your in the area and would like to bring a few projects that I've learned to craft from you Thanks brother!
hello Mr. dorsett thank you for the great videos a lot of information excellent explained easy to understand. your videos made me work with leather thank you very much
I'd like to see that too, but I think it would have to be made of wood or a hard plastic like ABS first, and then covered like most hardshell cases are. There's a series of 3 or 4 books about making various boxes and cases at Tandy, and one of them does have a guitar case in the cover photo. I'll try to find it sometime today.
@@jamesthe-doctor8981 That would be cool. In my head, I imagined using rawhide. Wet it, form it, dry it. Rawhide stitching to attach the sides/back. Glue and sew a nice leather on the outside with the fur-on leather glued a sewed in the inside. Metal riveted hardware. I think it could be done. You could even use several thinner pieces of rawhide and cross-orient the grain and make a “veneer” of sorts, just like plywood.
Hi Chuck, Very inspiring video! When you line filigree, any tips for how to get the glue where you want it on the liner and not where you don't want it? Thanks, Conor
If I'm looking to make my own boots and shoes, would suede be a good liner for those, or would it grip too much? Maybe for the bottom, where the foot rests?
very informative and I know its an older video but I have questions.... Does the linning peel over time? how do you prevent this from happening? by stitching all around the edges? by peeling I mean separate
Do you have any more videos on lining with suede? As far as edge finishing etc?? Looking to do some new Santa belts this winter and would love to line the black 4” belts with red suede..
How do you deal with edgework when lining a veg body? I tried this and the edges got..well, theres is a line of chrometan that dosent want to slick? Is the only option edgepaints?
It looks like in his projects that he cuts the liner short so he can glue veg tan to veg tan or whatever leather he using for a better edge finish? I am curious of the answer though. If someone figures it out, please let me know!!
Getting that tiny gap between stitch and edge fitted all away around? lets call it 1mm, trimming that 1mm all away around and then glueing it down preciselyprecisely man it feels very fiddly? Now thinking, after having watched some videos on shoemaking, that maybe... I could glue the chrome down, leave ~5mm in from the edge unglued, then trim it ? Skip gluing that part down on the frontpiece and just letting gluing the backing fix it before stitching? ...yeah realy trying to find a good soloution. all tips welcome, maybe it just is a fiddly thing to do one has to learn to put up with :P
Any suggestions for lining turned bags? When turning the lining wrinkles and ends up looking terrible even when using barges. How can I line without gluing it in? People have said to do a "drop in" liner but I'm hand stitching so not sure how that would work?
I'm curious about this too. I'm just starting out on bag making so I've been using less expensive canvas with the intention of moving on to leather. My liner canvas always wrinkles and looks too big. I bet with leather it looks even worse because the leather is stiffer.
OMG.... Sooooo many good ideas..... I'm afraid to watch anymore.. But, I will.. I'm always looking to learn new things. This is going to be my new obsession.. My husband isn't going to like this..... LOL Thank you for the videos.
I wish you had used the water-based cements instead of the toxic ones. I would like to see if those options work or a solvent based cement is the only option. Thanks!
I've been using Aquilim 315 with great results. No longer use Barge, which tended to dry out and become stringy, and then you have to dilute with extremely flammable thinner. Aquilim 315 thins with plain water. Dries quickly too, probably quicker than Barge.
Hey Chuck, thanks once again for this awesome segment. As a suggestion: I'd like some tips on skiving leather. In my country we can only find 4 to 5 oz, and when making wallets I have to skive by hand, and I'd like to know how to do it better (I have been using a skiving knife, and I have been looking into buying a french edge skiving tool too, so tips on both or something would be great). Thank you very very much once again for taking the time and being an amazing presenter.
Hi Bruno, A French edger is good for thinning a larger piece of leather and then we also have a flat skife knife for thinning the edges. We'll link a video below where Corter Leather uses both of these knives to build a card wallet. ua-cam.com/video/cBJQwtiZkqw/v-deo.html French Edger: www.weaverleathersupply.com/catalog/item-detail/00081-4/master-tools/pr_404/cp_/shop-now/hand-tools/master-tools Flat Skife Knife: www.weaverleathersupply.com/catalog/item-detail/65-2864-24/flat-leather-knife-24-mm/pr_58898
Thanks for the enthusiasm and the skill at teaching it makes me want to pick up a small patter and leather and try my hand. I do have a question regarding Hardened Leather projects. When working with leather that your going to hardened do you stich it all together before hand or after?
Quick question I noticed you cut the leather to size right after glueing it together is there a reason why you wouldnt want to let it cure/dry before cutting it to the exact size ? Does it make a difference at all? Or because you used contact cement it doesn't really dry/cure I know it reaches full strength after 12-24 hours something like that. So if I used a different glue white craft, fabric, tacky w/e I have on hand would it be better to wait for the glue to dry first or cut it right away
How do you deal with wrinkling in the corners of that briefcase? I keep thinking I need to glue the pieces together in nearly the final shape to keep the tension even on both sides.
Good question. When I line a wallet, it always wrinkles around the bend. Doesn't bother me too much, but if I was selling wallets I wouldn't be ok with it.
Christian we have a video showing how the briefcase was made that you can check out here: www.weaverleathersupply.com/catalog/cp_/shop-by-project/bags/leather-briefcase
Another great video Chuck! i have a video suggestion and also a question on a project i have been asked to do. Adding rabbit fur as a liner! as always i love torturing myself with a challenge... this will be my first lined project and i am trying to tackle adding rabbit fur as a liner on a big axe sheath. i have watched all the liner videos you have and haven't seen anything with rabbit on veg tan. very uncommon to have rabbit on a sheath, but have seen it on armor plenty and have been wondering whatthe best techniques and any tips might be for sewing around the fur, and cementing.
Excellent and instructional as are all your vids. I've been trimming my liners just a little smaller to allow edge finishing. Am I missing a trick or technique to do it easier? You can imagine the line up issues and extra cutting involved.
Quick question. If you normally alive down the edges before sewing, would you just first line the area and skive later? I imaging that would be difficult with glue in there. Or would you suggest cutting out your pieces first then skive before lining? Thank you for your videos!
Thank you for another great video on lining leather, Chuck! I lined my first wallets recently after watching your previous videos and love how they came out. I’m definitely going to try out the filigree method on a piece soon. Any chance you could do a video on trimming lined leather?
Thank you, Beau! So glad the wallets turned out good for you! We can definitely look at doing a video on trimming lined leather, would you want just showing how to trim the excess liner or how to finish the edges once it's lined and trimmed? Thanks!
As a newcomer to leather craft, less than 2 months experience, The Leather Element has been my #1 learning tool, but how do you get a straight cut with a strip cutter?
Hi Eric, You'll have to cut a straight edge on the leather first and then use the strap cutter to cut straps. See if this video helps: ua-cam.com/video/ABPOe4n_Ipg/v-deo.html
Hi Ian, You can use either one. Cow hide suede will add more weight and bulk to the bracers so if you're looking for something more lightweight, we would go with pig suede. If you do use cow suede, make sure to add a little bit more to the size to cover the extra bulk. Hope that helps!
Hi Chuck, Thanks for another great video. Q: if you were lining with wool felt, would you put glue on that material or just on the veg-tan piece to be lined with the wool felt?
We would recommend something like a 9-10 oz. english bridle leather or harness leather for strength. Leather will naturally stretch a little bit but if you use a full grain leather in 9 oz. or heavier you shouldn't have to reinforce it with anything. We have never tried reinforcing with fabric, so, we can't speak from experience if that would help or not.
@@WeaverLeatherSupply my name is Page Harris III. I did some leather craft when I was 10-11 years old. That was it until I saw a Weaver video about three months back. I’m 66 years old now and starting my leather craft career. Keep up the great videos. They are truly so helpful. Thank y’all
I really like your works and I appreciate that you are teaching us amazing ideas. I have a quick question. What kind of liner should I prefer on a watch strap? Do you think using veg tan is a good idea?
Hi Glen, Technically there is a “front” and “back” to suede but, with a quality tannage, it’s really hard to tell. One side is a bit more clean than the other but either will work. If you see the foot stamp on a piece then that’s the back side and can be a little more rough towards the edges. I usually have the cleanest side facing through the holes. Hope that makes sense!
Hi Chuck! I have some pig lining that I'm going to try.... I need help with dyeing. I use pro dye and have no problems, but only with Saddle Tan. It's my favourite colour to use but it bugs me! Haha I dye it as I do with other colours but it seems to look blackish after few dyes. I dye once, then wipe, then dye again. Wait 2 minutes and wipe excess off. Then dye again... And again... And again Hahaha I have used a whole small bottle on my last sheath! I need tips on using Saddle Tan please. Cheers mate.... Love your work! I wish Weaver were in Australia 🇦🇺 🇦🇺 🇦🇺
Cheers Australia! It sounds like you may just be using too much dye. I would try to get as much coverage in the first pass (sponge) without it dripping wet and then make one more pass and let it dry there. That should keep that pretty Saddle Tan color (one of my favorites too!).
I'm working on putting together a pattern for a pen slipcase and wanted to line it to create some contrast. Would suede be a problem against the metal and resin of a handmade pen? Same for chrome tanned leather. I've heard it can interact with metals. is that something I should be concerned about when choosing leather for this project?
@weaver.....is it possible to do this without using glue? I'm new and trying too make leather goods as Eco friendly as possible. Meaning no chrome tan,glue or other chemicals. Thanks for the videos!
Renia Aquilim is a great water based option. The only other option would be to stitch around all the filigree pieces, otherwise they won’t stay together. www.weaverleathersupply.com/catalog/item-detail/50-2118-16/renia-aquilim-sg-water-based/pr_59097/cp_/shop-now/leather-care/adhesives
Hello! I'm from Bulgaria! First, I want to apologize for my bad English! And ask, what thickness leather using for the pad. Аnd what thickness leather that you use for the production of bags and wallets! thank you in advance and I apologize for the anxiety I'm causing you!
My mom bought a trash bag full of scraps. I have no way to identify it myself. I don't want to use Chrome tan leather on a knife or gun. But lining it... DUH. Why didn't I think of that?! Then the nice ladies at Tandy Leather here in Tucson told me to just bring it in and they can help me identify them!!
What about a fabric liner?
You can tell this man literally cares about his job. He loves to teach and loves the topic. You have definitely been an inspiration and a great teacher! Keep up the great work!
O-
o
Chuck D. you're the Bob Ross of leather work.
Why this Guy dose not have his own tv show in beyond me. The create channel could really use him! Thanks chuck for all your work you do for us!
I was thinking about Create myself when I read what you said "have his own tv show". Then I looked down and saw you referenced it.
I completely agree.
Chuck, your enthusiasm and level of expertise, makes even a novices feel like they can do it. You explain it so well, and I love when you get "rolling", showing a sure sign of how passionate you are and how lucky we are to have someone take their time and share your knowledge. Cant thank you enough. Need to go to the next trade show that you are at, so please let people know when you will be around.
Hi Chuck. How nice to have you join me for lunch here in the UK. I'd like to see how you finish the edges. Would you cut the liner slightly short or try bevelling and burnishing the sandwich of different colours? A 'Part 2' would be really useful. Thanks for all your work.
So I'm looking to make a custom revolver holster for my father's and I's revolvers, it is a godsend I found your content. Thank You.
Every time I watch your video, my boyfriend is like “Hi Chuck!” LOL
This is fantastic. I've actually been wondering about liner. It's like you've read my mind. :)
The three musketeers ... thats one fantasitc piece you made there .
Absolutely love Chuck's videos -- lights a fire under my chair to try new things!
I watch all of your videos, if not for the great info you share, I would watch them for your contagious enthusiasm. Thank you.
Chuck, you never fail to show me something new. I never considered using a veg tan liner to give body to a thinner, more supple leather. Thanks for sharing!
Thank you, Laura!
I love this guy, if I have a bad day he changes my attitude
I think this is one of your best videos, really got the ideas flowing
When applying vaneers to large surfaces in wood working, the contact cement is applied to both sides, allowed to dry to the touch, battens are placed across the bottom piece, the vaneer positioned on top, and the battens pulled out one at a time, allowing the surfaces to come together.
That can be done with leather, either by placing the stiffer leather on top to avoid sagging, or by using a solid sheet, like a large cutting mat, as the separator.
Chuck, I thoroughly enjoy your videos and working with a great company Weaver Leathercraft is the perfect team to help the leathercraft community.
Graph Guy thanks so much!
I love this gentleman really brings the mood up
Sir, you are AMAZING! I was very intimidated and delayed working with leather for YEARS. You give me confidence and a new sense of adventure to be creative with confidence. God Bless you and keep ´em coming.
Chuck rocks...between him and skilltree I've become a leather fanatic....and spent alot of money
Me too
Good stuff, I've had folks wanting high-end looks but insisted flocking would do it. Later crying that it doesn't last and I'm a bandit for doing what they wanted, even after I explained the options to them. People are crazy. Do it right or don't do it at all. Keep your reputation. Kudos to this man for explaining what needs to be done and why.
THANK YOU! Looking everywhere for how to firm up leather with leather! You made my day!!
His videos give me 'This Old House' vibes..love it
Idea to splice belting, ...use the 1 1/2 “ belt punch, on a long angle... and create a couple notches, add four rivets... finish with a detailed square glued on.
Hi Chuck, we’ve watched many of your videos, and I’m wondering if you’ve ever heard of a pressing bag? If you make a bag or pouch and need to turn it right sides out, you could slip a sewing ham inside then flatten your seams with a mallet. It should give a better look
Paint roller... freaking awesome idea
Hey Chuck thanks for the show last weekend, it was a pleasure meeting you! I'm sure some of your guests will take up this wonderful hobby . Hope to see you again when your in the area and would like to bring a few projects that I've learned to craft from you Thanks brother!
Bizzy Beez lawn-n-landscape thank you so much for stopping by! A pleasure meeting you as well!
Chuck, Your enthusiasm makes me want to cover the globe with leather. Your employer should be wary of ever losing you.
Awesome video! Can you please please please do a series on how to make a full suit of leather armor? That set you have in the back is gorgeous!
Nice one Chuck!
Great video but I’d like to see how the edges are finished in a fully lined piece with a backing put on thx
hello Mr. dorsett thank you for the great videos a lot of information excellent explained easy to understand. your videos made me work with leather thank you very much
Great stuff! Here’s and idea I would love to see. A custom hardshell acoustic guitar case. Hair/fur on hide on the inside would be beautiful.
I'd like to see that too, but I think it would have to be made of wood or a hard plastic like ABS first, and then covered like most hardshell cases are. There's a series of 3 or 4 books about making various boxes and cases at Tandy, and one of them does have a guitar case in the cover photo. I'll try to find it sometime today.
@@jamesthe-doctor8981
That would be cool. In my head, I imagined using rawhide. Wet it, form it, dry it. Rawhide stitching to attach the sides/back. Glue and sew a nice leather on the outside with the fur-on leather glued a sewed in the inside. Metal riveted hardware. I think it could be done. You could even use several thinner pieces of rawhide and cross-orient the grain and make a “veneer” of sorts, just like plywood.
I am from Germany and youre work is amazing. Thank you for this Videos.I like only black and brown leather .
oilfortheworld thank you so much and hello from the US!
I just came here to get some tips on lining a piece of veg-tan. Which I got, thank you! Now I want to go purchase more suede.
Great to hear! You're welcome :)
Hi Chuck,
Very inspiring video! When you line filigree, any tips for how to get the glue where you want it on the liner and not where you don't want it?
Thanks,
Conor
If I'm looking to make my own boots and shoes, would suede be a good liner for those, or would it grip too much? Maybe for the bottom, where the foot rests?
It would definitely add some grip so I would probably just do the bottom or the bottom and a small piece at the back of the shoe.
very informative and I know its an older video but I have questions.... Does the linning peel over time? how do you prevent this from happening? by stitching all around the edges? by peeling I mean separate
Do you have any more videos on lining with suede? As far as edge finishing etc?? Looking to do some new Santa belts this winter and would love to line the black 4” belts with red suede..
How do you deal with edgework when lining a veg body? I tried this and the edges got..well, theres is a line of chrometan that dosent want to slick? Is the only option edgepaints?
That's a good question and I've been wondering the same thing. Hopefully we can both get the answer to this.
It looks like in his projects that he cuts the liner short so he can glue veg tan to veg tan or whatever leather he using for a better edge finish? I am curious of the answer though. If someone figures it out, please let me know!!
Getting that tiny gap between stitch and edge fitted all away around? lets call it 1mm, trimming that 1mm all away around and then glueing it down preciselyprecisely man it feels very fiddly? Now thinking, after having watched some videos on shoemaking, that maybe... I could glue the chrome down, leave ~5mm in from the edge unglued, then trim it ? Skip gluing that part down on the frontpiece and just letting gluing the backing fix it before stitching? ...yeah realy trying to find a good soloution. all tips welcome, maybe it just is a fiddly thing to do one has to learn to put up with :P
What if I want to add a fabric as a liner. What glue should I use and what kind os fabric fit better without wrinkle? Thanks
I'm wondering about this too.
This is exactly the explanation I needed! Thank you! Cheers from Poland!
Great to hear!
Glad I found this video I was actually wondering if I could line chrome tan with veg tan. Now it's going to help me a lot with making my wallet.
Any suggestions for lining turned bags? When turning the lining wrinkles and ends up looking terrible even when using barges. How can I line without gluing it in? People have said to do a "drop in" liner but I'm hand stitching so not sure how that would work?
I'm curious about this too. I'm just starting out on bag making so I've been using less expensive canvas with the intention of moving on to leather. My liner canvas always wrinkles and looks too big. I bet with leather it looks even worse because the leather is stiffer.
If you do a drop in liner, take a bigger seam allowance so it ends up slightly smaller than the bag. It won’t wrinkle as much.
This might help. I saw this last week.
ua-cam.com/video/swpH3eh75HY/v-deo.html&feature=share
OMG.... Sooooo many good ideas..... I'm afraid to watch anymore.. But, I will.. I'm always looking to learn new things. This is going to be my new obsession.. My husband isn't going to like this..... LOL Thank you for the videos.
Be forewarned, it quickly becomes an addiction!
Great video, lot of useful information in here. And also a pleasure to watch, you can clearly see how much passion Chuck puts into his work.
I wish you had used the water-based cements instead of the toxic ones. I would like to see if those options work or a solvent based cement is the only option. Thanks!
photojournalistsf Renia is a very good water based option and in testing we found it pretty comparable to Barge.
@@WeaverLeatherSupply thank you :)
I've been using Aquilim 315 with great results. No longer use Barge, which tended to dry out and become stringy, and then you have to dilute with extremely flammable thinner. Aquilim 315 thins with plain water. Dries quickly too, probably quicker than Barge.
Referring back to your mask episode where you baked the mask, how could you "line" it with a suede to make it more comfortable and form fitting?
Hey Chuck, thanks once again for this awesome segment. As a suggestion: I'd like some tips on skiving leather. In my country we can only find 4 to 5 oz, and when making wallets I have to skive by hand, and I'd like to know how to do it better (I have been using a skiving knife, and I have been looking into buying a french edge skiving tool too, so tips on both or something would be great). Thank you very very much once again for taking the time and being an amazing presenter.
Hi Bruno,
A French edger is good for thinning a larger piece of leather and then we also have a flat skife knife for thinning the edges. We'll link a video below where Corter Leather uses both of these knives to build a card wallet.
ua-cam.com/video/cBJQwtiZkqw/v-deo.html
French Edger: www.weaverleathersupply.com/catalog/item-detail/00081-4/master-tools/pr_404/cp_/shop-now/hand-tools/master-tools
Flat Skife Knife: www.weaverleathersupply.com/catalog/item-detail/65-2864-24/flat-leather-knife-24-mm/pr_58898
Plenty of tips again Chuck, thank you. 😊
This guy is awesome. Loads of great tips and ideas and concise
Thank you, Jason!
Great video! That rapier carrier is gorgeous!
Arctic Arsenal thank you!
Thanks for the enthusiasm and the skill at teaching it makes me want to pick up a small patter and leather and try my hand. I do have a question regarding Hardened Leather projects. When working with leather that your going to hardened do you stich it all together before hand or after?
Hi Bryan,
We recommend stitching after hardening but, you will want to punch your stitch holes beforehand.
Quick question I noticed you cut the leather to size right after glueing it together is there a reason why you wouldnt want to let it cure/dry before cutting it to the exact size ? Does it make a difference at all? Or because you used contact cement it doesn't really dry/cure I know it reaches full strength after 12-24 hours something like that. So if I used a different glue white craft, fabric, tacky w/e I have on hand would it be better to wait for the glue to dry first or cut it right away
what are some fabric liners to use in leather bags?
You can use a variety of different fabrics depending on the look you are going for.
How do you deal with wrinkling in the corners of that briefcase? I keep thinking I need to glue the pieces together in nearly the final shape to keep the tension even on both sides.
Good question. When I line a wallet, it always wrinkles around the bend. Doesn't bother me too much, but if I was selling wallets I wouldn't be ok with it.
Christian we have a video showing how the briefcase was made that you can check out here: www.weaverleathersupply.com/catalog/cp_/shop-by-project/bags/leather-briefcase
Hey, Chuck - Another great video lesson. I've been watching all of them. I love the filigree pieces! Thanks, man.
Thank you, Bill!
Another great video Chuck! i have a video suggestion and also a question on a project i have been asked to do. Adding rabbit fur as a liner! as always i love torturing myself with a challenge... this will be my first lined project and i am trying to tackle adding rabbit fur as a liner on a big axe sheath. i have watched all the liner videos you have and haven't seen anything with rabbit on veg tan. very uncommon to have rabbit on a sheath, but have seen it on armor plenty and have been wondering whatthe best techniques and any tips might be for sewing around the fur, and cementing.
Excellent and instructional as are all your vids. I've been trimming my liners just a little smaller to allow edge finishing. Am I missing a trick or technique to do it easier? You can imagine the line up issues and extra cutting involved.
Inspirational and sound advice, as ever Chuck. A great element.
On the filigree do you need to glue it down? If so just where the leather will sit or what?
Would have liked to see how you glued the suede on the filigree work.
Hi Chris,
We actually have a video showing that process, we'll link it below for you.
ua-cam.com/video/HBPOuOk7pUw/v-deo.html
Quick question. If you normally alive down the edges before sewing, would you just first line the area and skive later? I imaging that would be difficult with glue in there. Or would you suggest cutting out your pieces first then skive before lining? Thank you for your videos!
Skive/shave not “alive” 😂
good one
Great content. Answered all questions i had previously about leather liners
Thank you for another great video on lining leather, Chuck! I lined my first wallets recently after watching your previous videos and love how they came out. I’m definitely going to try out the filigree method on a piece soon. Any chance you could do a video on trimming lined leather?
Thank you, Beau! So glad the wallets turned out good for you! We can definitely look at doing a video on trimming lined leather, would you want just showing how to trim the excess liner or how to finish the edges once it's lined and trimmed? Thanks!
As a newcomer to leather craft, less than 2 months experience, The Leather Element has been my #1 learning tool, but how do you get a straight cut with a strip cutter?
Note: You are a genuine man of passion. Please, never change. I love your work and look forward to seeing a new video, by YOU, pop up in my feed.
Hi Eric,
You'll have to cut a straight edge on the leather first and then use the strap cutter to cut straps. See if this video helps: ua-cam.com/video/ABPOe4n_Ipg/v-deo.html
That actually helped out a ton, I didn't think of cutting in with a knife to get to more sturdy leather. Straight cuts from here on out
Thank You
Chuck, if the worriers from King Richard the great could see your leather work, I’m sure they would envious of your. Best regards, Richard
If you were planning on lining bracers with suede, would you use the pig skin or the cow hide? Would the weight of the leather matter?
Hi Ian,
You can use either one. Cow hide suede will add more weight and bulk to the bracers so if you're looking for something more lightweight, we would go with pig suede. If you do use cow suede, make sure to add a little bit more to the size to cover the extra bulk. Hope that helps!
Why didnt i watch this before i made my leather armor 😫. Well time for a redesign haha.
Also is there an easy way i line finished armor?
Hi Chuck, Thanks for another great video. Q: if you were lining with wool felt, would you put glue on that material or just on the veg-tan piece to be lined with the wool felt?
I need to make a leather seat for a sling chair. How do I give it strength so it doesn't stretch? Do I use some type of muslin? What glue?
We would recommend something like a 9-10 oz. english bridle leather or harness leather for strength. Leather will naturally stretch a little bit but if you use a full grain leather in 9 oz. or heavier you shouldn't have to reinforce it with anything. We have never tried reinforcing with fabric, so, we can't speak from experience if that would help or not.
Wonderful colors!!...
Love all the Weaver videos !!!
Thank you so much!
@@WeaverLeatherSupply my name is Page Harris III. I did some leather craft when I was 10-11 years old. That was it until I saw a Weaver video about three months back. I’m 66 years old now and starting my leather craft career. Keep up the great videos. They are truly so helpful. Thank y’all
Can I line in suede after I wet form let's say a mask so it's more comfortable?
I really like your works and I appreciate that you are teaching us amazing ideas. I have a quick question. What kind of liner should I prefer on a watch strap? Do you think using veg tan is a good idea?
Hey. Could you man a video detailing the steps in making a leather cowboy hat?
Can you do an episode showing the bake hardened process? Would live to see how that works without the leather getting brittle.
Thank you for all your teaching videos, I have learned so much from you! Great job! Super appreciated
Another great video, thanks so much!
I want to line all my projects now! :P
Thanx for the tip Chuck. What would you suggest with thinner material for a liner? Glueing seeps through, so what would you suggest?
Nico Ackermann I don’t use fabric liner very much but 3M makes a spray glue that works pretty good!
It is easy to work with thick leather. Magicize something with crumpled suede leather.
On the filigree, which side of the suede do you see through the holes?
Hi Glen,
Technically there is a “front” and “back” to suede but, with a quality tannage, it’s really hard to tell. One side is a bit more clean than the other but either will work. If you see the foot stamp on a piece then that’s the back side and can be a little more rough towards the edges. I usually have the cleanest side facing through the holes. Hope that makes sense!
wonderful. you are a good teacher. thanks for all the information you give us.
Is it OK to use a diff type or lighter weight leather for a welt than the weight of the product?
Hi Chuck! I have some pig lining that I'm going to try.... I need help with dyeing. I use pro dye and have no problems, but only with Saddle Tan. It's my favourite colour to use but it bugs me! Haha I dye it as I do with other colours but it seems to look blackish after few dyes. I dye once, then wipe, then dye again. Wait 2 minutes and wipe excess off. Then dye again... And again... And again Hahaha I have used a whole small bottle on my last sheath! I need tips on using Saddle Tan please. Cheers mate.... Love your work! I wish Weaver were in Australia 🇦🇺 🇦🇺 🇦🇺
Cheers Australia! It sounds like you may just be using too much dye. I would try to get as much coverage in the first pass (sponge) without it dripping wet and then make one more pass and let it dry there. That should keep that pretty Saddle Tan color (one of my favorites too!).
I'm working on putting together a pattern for a pen slipcase and wanted to line it to create some contrast. Would suede be a problem against the metal and resin of a handmade pen? Same for chrome tanned leather. I've heard it can interact with metals. is that something I should be concerned about when choosing leather for this project?
@weaver.....is it possible to do this without using glue? I'm new and trying too make leather goods as Eco friendly as possible. Meaning no chrome tan,glue or other chemicals. Thanks for the videos!
There are water based glues that are much more eco friendly than solvent based contact cements. Aqualim 315 is a really good one
Renia Aquilim is a great water based option. The only other option would be to stitch around all the filigree pieces, otherwise they won’t stay together.
www.weaverleathersupply.com/catalog/item-detail/50-2118-16/renia-aquilim-sg-water-based/pr_59097/cp_/shop-now/leather-care/adhesives
Is there a video of you actually making that bag?
How do you glue a backing on something with cutouts? You just can't cover the whole thing it will show glue through it.
Hi there,
See if this video helps: ua-cam.com/video/HBPOuOk7pUw/v-deo.html
I'm just curious, how would that pigskin work as a liner for a holster? Thanks and I love the videos!
can you wet form after the liner or do you do that before adding the liner ?
Hello! I'm from Bulgaria! First, I want to apologize for my bad English! And ask, what thickness leather using for the pad. Аnd what thickness leather that you use for the production of bags and wallets! thank you in advance and I apologize for the anxiety I'm causing you!
Explain top grain vs bottom grain ?
Another great video! How do you glue the suede to the cut out leather if you can't apply glue to the entire surface of the suede?
Hi there,
See if this video helps! ua-cam.com/video/HBPOuOk7pUw/v-deo.html
@@WeaverLeatherSupply Thank you very much! Great tutorial!
Chuck, on the filigree work, is that glue only for the inner details?
How about a Leather Element about using a Dremel for burnishing and polishing leather projects?
My mom bought a trash bag full of scraps. I have no way to identify it myself. I don't want to use Chrome tan leather on a knife or gun. But lining it... DUH. Why didn't I think of that?! Then the nice ladies at Tandy Leather here in Tucson told me to just bring it in and they can help me identify them!!
Loving the energy brother. Great video
Going to order some glue! Thanks Chuck!