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10th December 13, 01:56 PM
#1
 Originally Posted by MacGumerait
HippieLee , if you have a fabric store nearby , ask them to show you " pinking shears " and perhaps ask them to demonstrate them . It's a type of scissors used to give this effect on fabric . This might help you a bit . Pinking shears aren't recommended for most leather ... just fabric , although it might help you on the concept of the scalloped edge and the " pinking " edge design .
Cheers , Mike
I was wondering about those - I saw them online but all the ones I saw specifically said for fabric but I also saw some reviews were the people said theirs were good for heavy fabric and I wondered if heavy fabric might be relatively equatable to very thin leather...they had triangles and scallops...
either that or get good at metal-work along with leather! lol
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My Leatherwork Album - Feel free to look and critique - I'm just learning leather and welcome all help.
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10th December 13, 02:56 PM
#2
 Originally Posted by HippieLee
I was wondering about those - I saw them online but all the ones I saw specifically said for fabric but I also saw some reviews were the people said theirs were good for heavy fabric and I wondered if heavy fabric might be relatively equatable to very thin leather...they had triangles and scallops...
either that or get good at metal-work along with leather! lol
Unless it's a fabulous pair of pinking shears AND your leather is both very firm of hand and thin you're better off not bothering.
If the leather is too soft it just mushes through the blades, and obviously if it's too thick you're going to have uneven cutting and such.
Plus, it's impossible to find a good pinking shears with anything other than the sawtooth zig-zag cutting profile.
ith:
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The Following User Says 'Aye' to artificer For This Useful Post:
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10th December 13, 04:32 PM
#3
 Originally Posted by artificer
Unless it's a fabulous pair of pinking shears AND your leather is both very firm of hand and thin you're better off not bothering.
If the leather is too soft it just mushes through the blades, and obviously if it's too thick you're going to have uneven cutting and such.
Plus, it's impossible to find a good pinking shears with anything other than the sawtooth zig-zag cutting profile.
 ith:
Lol, I figured that was just way too easy...nobody would buy a 100 dollar punch or a pinking wheel rig for hundreds of dollars if a 15 dollar pair of scissors would do the job.
I'm assuming a punch would have to be 1 single crescent so you can do any size arc...I'm gonna have to save up - I doubt my metal working skill will get me very far.
.................................................. ........................................ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
My Leatherwork Album - Feel free to look and critique - I'm just learning leather and welcome all help.
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