If you want to see more detail just click on the image of course.
![]() |
This carving of the sailing ship (11" x 14") was made
to demonstrate
how well white "Cova Dye" would stick to leather. The sails are pushed
out from the back a little (embossed), but the 7/8 oz. tooling cowhide
works well when there are many overlaps. The hardest part was cutting
the
lines. I remember using a steel ruler.
|
![]() |
You may often find yourself looking for things to make
from various
size smaller pieces and all sizes and weights become useful for a wide
variety of interesting projects This switch plate cover is a good
example
of a useful item which can be decorated in a wide variety of
interesting
styles to suit any room in the house. I have also seen metal backing
applied
for stiffness and 3/4 oz. used to cover an old metal plate.This cover
plate
(2 3/4" x 4 1/2") is made from belt weight cowhide with strips glued to
the back to build it out on the edge. I believe the design is from a
Tandy
Doodle Page by Gene Noland..
|
![]() |
This is a traditional saddle lamp that I made as a Christmas present. It is important to rubber cement the 3/4 oz. cowhide down to a lightweight tag board so it does not go all out of shape as you tool it. I used rawhide for the shade but I did not have the time to burn a scene on it. This is sure a good project to get a lot of tooling mileage out of a rather small quantity of leather. After punching holes in the rawhide, I soaked it in a bucket of water for about 20 minutes before shaping it to the frame. Don't think that you would want to soak it too long or it would stretch too much. |
E-Mail Tom Boyle