dposalski: I've made and worn and fiddled with a bunch over the years. Use medium weight leather for body and strap with an extra 3" layer folded up from the bottom. Use heavyweight leather for bottom protection and woolen felt inside the bottom for silence. Make the strap adjustable and tighten it enough so that the quiver sort of molds to your back. That will keep it in position most of the time and will keep your arrows from rattling around and falling out if you bend over. I can jump up and down and actually jog with mine without it rattling. Make the quiver 22" or longer so the bottom of the feathers will ride quietly inside the lip. No need to use a second or third strap, they just prevent you from sliding the quiver under your arm when you are going through thick brush. They also prevent you slipping the quiver on and off quickly and easily. All of this is what Howard Hill taught us many years ago and as usual, he was right on. The only difference I make is to attach the top of the strap halfway across the top of the quiver. By doing this, the quiver stays more vertical with the fletching close behind my ear for a quick reload. One more thing, don't load the quiver down with big pouches of stuff - that just makes it slip. You just need a small leather pouch with spare bowstring, wax and butane lighter. On mine, I also carry a small sharpening file in a slot between the overlapping seam. Occasionally you will readjust the quiver's position with the elbow of your bowarm. Find a bunch of dull, inexpensive leather and experiment until you get it just right, I think you will have fun doing it. Good luck.