That looks like a splendid strap, albeit perhaps a little too thick for that particular watch.
I've not made a strap in a while but this was this morning's effort. I think I'm improving
Fairly small lug width on this (17mm) so tapered to 16mm at the buckle.
That looks like a splendid strap, albeit perhaps a little too thick for that particular watch.
Thats a lovely looking strap
I agree that it doesnt quite go with that elegant Breitling though ☺
Last edited by Velorum; 7th November 2016 at 09:52.
Very nice work. Having spent some time making nylon straps and now experimenting with leather I know how very difficult it is to produce something even half presentable let alone something like that. 1mm out on a line of stitching and it sticks out a mile on a small item like a watch strap. Great stuff.
Very well done. I wish I was that artistic.
always feels better wearing something DIY, how do you finish the edges?
The fruits of this afternoons labour. Quite pleased with the results
Nicely done
Slowly but surely improving. Decided to line this one in natural calf and polish the edges but leave them natural colour also for a bit of contrast.
Lovely work, can I ask where you buy your leather from? Is it Veg Tan or do you buy something else? What thickness is the leather on the last (black) strap, 2mm?
I believe the very dark brown is English Cordovan that came from Claytons (and that shell was around 1.8-2mm thick depending on where you measured on the shell - we went halves on the shell). Think the keeper's blue bridle, which Nick was good enough to send me a piece of - that I made this from ..
I'll let TC comment on where the lining comes from..
al
Yes, Al has it spot on. The dark brown (it's not black) was a piece of Cordovan that Al and I went halves on. The blue is some Bridle from Claytons. The calf, I don't remember where I got it from - I tried all sorts of places looking for suitable leather.
Good work. It's coming along nicely.
Did you try Aacrack for leather. I've just place a new order with them today
.. did inquire with AaCrack about genuine cordovan - indeed. Further research turned up Claytons tannery and the fact that English cordovan is a thing .. which whilst it isn't quite Horween, its very close and has the benefit of coming in some colours Horween don't do (or at best very hard to find - e.g blue/green)..
The bridle above as used on the cordovan keeper and on my all blue middle stitched strap, requires some patience to skive thin.
al
I don't know if you have been but if you get a chance it's well worth picking up your cordovan shells on site as you get to have a proper rummage and pick exactly what your after. Quite a unique smell on the floor...
Crack do some sublime Italian veg tan calf, or at least used to. Beautiful stuff
I bet ... definitely will get something from them at some stage - but didn't want half the cow turning up, much as per your prior picture of what one's better halves might not like landing on the kitchen floor as per http://forum.tz-uk.com/showthread.ph...ild-lesson-one ..
for small practice lumps - leather4craft have a very interesting range - I've worked my way round most of their horween stuff they do (derby and rust both superb)..
al
Thanks both for the info. most of the stuff I have for sheath making is much thicker - think its time to do some shopping ;)
This looks excellent I bet it looks better on the wrist (hints)
Michael
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... With rather some trepidation, I went for an unlined simple strap to start on my half..
(Ritza cream thread, edges browned)
al
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Looking good Al!
Yeah, it's just one of the ones that use de blades. It took a bit of getting used to but works well for straps. I did look at buying a propper one but they are quite pricey.
A bit more practice is a good thing, right ..?
... KS on horween Derby, Nomos on English cordovan ..
al
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Looks good! I did a couple of straps myself some years ago, just did not find enough time anymore.
I think it is a great feeling to wear a watch band that you actually made yourself. Keep up the good work!
Amazing what you can do with the wife old briefcase (which was made out of some extremely soft natural coloured leather)
I think that with each one they get better.
That's a good looking thing - bridle on the back ..?
( thread type ..? And was that with the Blanchard iron for the holes..? ... Edge finishing ? )
al
Thanks Al
Yes, the bridle to line (skived fairly thin).
Blanchard irons and stitched with 0.51mm au chinois in brick colour (not as red as I hoped when I ordered it)
Edges just hand bufnished and died darker. The briefcase leather was very soft so not easy to burnish. The photo actually has loads of green fluff on the edges from where I gave it a last polish with shoe polish (the strap equivalent of photographs with fingerprints on watches 😂)
All looking good...
Is there a special awl for doing the side stitching holes and how on earth do you get the spacing right going around the tip?!
(Incidentally, I was at a Leathersellers' livery thing last night (a charity networking thing) and there was talk about their support of charities using leather crafts/product-making skills with various client groups.)
Yes, a special awl is used with a diamond profile that allows the slanty stitching to be done.
The spacing of the stitches is either marked with a pricking wheel or by using pricking irons (I use irons).
The awl is in the middle of the two pricking irons that I have, in the photo below. I use the 2 prong iron for the point of the strap where the curve needs to be madd
Brilliant, thank you so much. Love to learn!
They are coming along very nicely. Try some Tokonol on those edges if they are proving difficult to burnish. It sticks the fibres down very well, great stuff.
Nut coloured Horween with blue stitch. Lined in vintage natural leather showing a lovely patina (it was a very expensive briefcase that my wife has had for a decade, now living another life)
20/18 in size
Both gorgeous, especially the ex-briefcase! Nice work. (I've got a lovely saddle leather tan briefcase which I've had for 30 years. Still a long way off from needing to be re-incarnated!)
That's looking really good. The stitching is great, is that a 632 thread?
Thanks.
I feel like my stitching is getting there. I need to fine tune the edge creasing a bit, but it's fun learning.
It's 532. First time I've tried that gauge and I think it works. I have some 632 which is marginally thinner and again seems to work well with the SPI of my irons.
I initially bought some 332 and it's a bit thick. Shame as I've still got the spool and they aren't cheap.
Which creaser are you using. I've got a few and find some really difficult to use. Yeah the lin cable can be pricey, I've found a place that does 632 for £18 which is a steal compared to the usual £30+.
Sajou do small cards of 532 for around 3-4 ukp - postage is a bit stiff but order five at a go and it isn't too bad for 10m worth ...
al
I'm using a CS Osborne edge creaser like this one:
https://hwebber.co.uk/shop/c-s-osbor...-creaser-tool/
It's not easy to use at all (must be a technique that I am yet to master).
I've been edge bevelling also, but again that can be a bit tricky on some of the softer leathers (I didn't edge bevel on the latest strap with blue stitching above, just creased).
£18 for a spool is decent value. Care to share your source?? :)
I draw the shape that I need on the reverse of the face leather (I've drawn around straps I like the size of, I've made a template from card and drawn around that and I've also just measured and drawn free-ish hand, just depends how I feel). Then a just cut using a saddlers round knife. I understand the mass production way is to use a clicker press and a stamp to stamp out lovely regular strap shapes.
Many thanks.
I have a store of leather - including some exotics - that I've been using for other items such as knife sheaths and phone covers, but this thread has got me thinking about giving a watch strap a go.
I was going to try the freehand method but was convinced there there must be another way, as the straps in this thread all look so amazingly professional!
I have only just come across this thread, as I don't typically check this part of the forum very often. That is impressive work, and great upcycling!