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Main Boards => Hunting Knives and Crafters => Topic started by: 92Fspc4 on December 07, 2015, 08:45:00 PM
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I am going to start making sheaths for my knives. I need to get a few make for Christmas presents. I bought a stitch awl and have practiced a bit on card board and just to get the motions down. Its pretty simple. Do any of you guys use one of these? Also are there any other soft materials you use besides leather (vinyl, canvas etc.)? Where are some good places to get leather? What weight leather do you generally use (min./ Max.)? What material do you use for your stitching? The stuff that came with my awl seem strong enough but its almost a hemp like thread. Should I wax the thread? Sorry for all the questions but I'd like to get as much info as I can before starting.
Thank you in advance for your help.
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I bought one of the stitching awls that has a bobbin in the handle, but I could never get it to work well for me.
I prefer to hand stitch with two needles, passing the needles through the same hole from opposite sides. Especially if the hole is punched with an awl, rather than drilled, the hole closes back up and really locks the stitch tight.
I generally use 6-7 oz leather. By the time I have the front and rear layer and the 3rd layer of the welt in between, I have to punch the holes with a regular, straight leather awl and have to lean on it pretty hard to get it through. The alternative, which I have to use if there are maybe 7 layers in a large Bowie knife sheath throat, is to put a very small drill bit in the drill press after marking the hole locations with a marking wheel.
The thread I buy is heavy hand-stitching nylon that is already waxed, but I usually wax it again myself with beeswax.
If you can get your hands on a leather stitching book (Tandy carries one by Al Stohlman) it will speed up the learning process A LOT.
There are also some excellent tutorials on U-tube if you do a leather stitching search.
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Thank you for all the info
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I use waxed bow string material for my stitching. It works great for me and I always have many colors on hand.