trevort wrote: ↑Thu May 25, 2017 7:43 am
Keith, Barry did the fallow hide you have seen at my place. I recommend picking his brain before you sending the next one straight to him and avoid the pain
Well Keith I was describing the right tool for the job!
Just pm Barry and get his address and what you do to it to get it there in reasonable nick
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Noooooo, get stuck in and do the job yourself, you will be proud of your achievement and learn at the same time. Bad Trevort.
Cutting away the fat and flesh is getting old quickly.... when I think I'm almost done, I find more.
What's best to wash it when I am done before I start to tan it?
Well Keith I was describing the right tool for the job!
Just pm Barry and get his address and what you do to it to get it there in reasonable nick
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Noooooo, get stuck in and do the job yourself, you will be proud of your achievement and learn at the same time. Bad Trevort.
Cutting away the fat and flesh is getting old quickly.... when I think I'm almost done, I find more.
What's best to wash it when I am done before I start to tan it?
Read instructions on the kit, it will tell you exactly what steps to take, when to take them and everything else you will need to know.
The leder kits come with very little instruction certainly nothing like the instructions the old leidreiters kits came with.
Despite knowing how much work is in cattle hides I just finished salting another one Gave a bloke a hand this morning and shot a little steer destined for the freezer, skin was only going to be tossed so thought why not.
Might do a bit of a pictorial if I remember.
So followed the instructions as best as I could, apart from the end I hung it apose to nailing into a fence.
It looks like a wrinkled avatar. Have I ruined it??
Can't seem to attach a photo.
Keith wrote: ↑Wed Jun 07, 2017 5:43 pm
So followed the instructions as best as I could, apart from the end I hung it apose to nailing into a fence.
It looks like a wrinkled avatar. Have I ruined it??
Can't seem to attach a photo.
Thanks.
You must peg them out so they are taut when they are wet, then let them dry and then apply the softening agent in the kit. If dry now, try and put it back in the solution to soften, then peg it out properly all the way round with galvanised nails, then softening agent and breaking followed by sanding the bloom off.
Yep drum tight when wet. Let dry, use lube, let dry, sand, break on beam if too crispy.
I find a pallet is easier, doing it horizontally rather than try ing to hold a soggy hide up with one hand and nail with the other on a fence. (Nailgun?)
Dunderi wrote: ↑Thu Jun 08, 2017 8:15 am
Yep drum tight when wet. Let dry, use lube, let dry, sand, break on beam if too crispy.
I find a pallet is easier, doing it horizontally rather than try ing to hold a soggy hide up with one hand and nail with the other on a fence. (Nailgun?)
Power staple gun. I have an air-powered one that was an Aldi markdown - $14.99 was just too cheap to pass up.