Just getting into leather craft, after being a woodworker for my entire life, and you punching holes in your leather in the inside corners is exactly what woodworkers do. You probably know this, but it is good to know I can take some of my life skills into this new adventure. Looking forward to my journey and learning from your videos.
I cut leather the same way, but I strop the blade on a cheap-o 1X30 inch belt sander from Harbor Freight ($50 ish). When the leather belt wears out I cut a new one from 2-3 ounce veg-tan, glue it together with contact glue, put some rouge on it and away we go. I get mucho use from a blade and I think it may be sharper than out of the box. If I need to, I can swap out the leather strap for a sanding belt. Thanks for all your videos.
FYI: cutting straight edges with a plastic straight-edge runs the risk of the blade jumping and taking off a finger tip. It can be don't, as is obviously shown, but using a metal straight edge. I used to do paste-up graphic design, prior to desktop publishing. Of all the hand me down triangles I used for cutting, ALL of them had scratched down the length, with a gap where someone's finger was. The trick is to angle the cutting edge just ever so slightly away from the edge, so it doesn't catch and jump up. Also, once you position the edge, back your fingers away from the edge, like a bad habit. If you're a big fan of severed digits, lots of blood and stitches, then never-mind.
Just getting into leather craft, after being a woodworker for my entire life, and you punching holes in your leather in the inside corners is exactly what woodworkers do. You probably know this, but it is good to know I can take some of my life skills into this new adventure. Looking forward to my journey and learning from your videos.
I cut leather the same way, but I strop the blade on a cheap-o 1X30 inch belt sander from Harbor Freight ($50 ish). When the leather belt wears out I cut a new one from 2-3 ounce veg-tan, glue it together with contact glue, put some rouge on it and away we go. I get mucho use from a blade and I think it may be sharper than out of the box. If I need to, I can swap out the leather strap for a sanding belt. Thanks for all your videos.
Thank you Joe. Learn something useful every time I watch one of your videos. Much appreciated.
You make that look so easy - amazing - thank you.
I thought it was just me having a hard time cutting Hermann Oak. At least now I know why, and what to do about it. Thanks for the tips!
Thank you, Joe, this looks very helpful, I'm anxious to try it tomorrow!
I use my swivel knife to make the first cut then use my case cutter. I have a shakey hand.
Very nîce! Thank you for the video
When are you going to come out with more tooling kits!!!!
They’re on the way. Should be in stock in a week or two.
Look Joe when transferring your line how did that work ?carbon paper or what. A stylist?
FYI: cutting straight edges with a plastic straight-edge runs the risk of the blade jumping and taking off a finger tip. It can be don't, as is obviously shown, but using a metal straight edge. I used to do paste-up graphic design, prior to desktop publishing. Of all the hand me down triangles I used for cutting, ALL of them had scratched down the length, with a gap where someone's finger was. The trick is to angle the cutting edge just ever so slightly away from the edge, so it doesn't catch and jump up. Also, once you position the edge, back your fingers away from the edge, like a bad habit.
If you're a big fan of severed digits, lots of blood and stitches, then never-mind.
What? No round or head knife?
🎉Добрый день. Можите прикреплять эскизы для тесния к видео?
Always awesome help thanks