Bit sad you used modern 'bungee' material for fixing stuff, but then i realized i saw you make several en masse during the video and quickly realized you make these to sell and the bungee obviously makes it so that it will fit the wide variety of customers ... so then i could no longer blame you for it. Nice work, tnx for sharing ^^
@@robspurway7723 Hi Rob, any chance you can share the PDF for the arm guard? I have been trying (very unsuccessfully I must say), to find a plan for arm guards and quivers for months now. Thanks in advance!
I have a few of then knocking around in my shop somewhere. If you want to send me an email at bobemminger @ Gmail I can send you the details on what I have left.
+Brandon Absolutely! You would need an exact I or razor knife for cutting the leather as well as a method of punching holes (drill/leather punch), a river setting tool, an edge slicker (in a pinch you can burnish the edge with a scrap of blue jeans), a mallet or maul, and three tooling stamps a beveler (B201), a basket weave (x511), and a camouflage tool (c431.
im sure theyd sell like hotcakes for $50. considering there is probably about $20-25 in materials and at least 3 hours in all of the tooling, cutting, dying, and finishing.
I have been shooting recurve as well as compound bow for some time now, I have no need for this. Perhaps if you spend the time with your equipment and technique that you do with your leather craft/ work you might find that there is no need for any of this crap.
Right, me and hundreds of years of mounted archers are all wrong and just need to get on your level. If you had any idea what you were talking about you would know that firing from horseback, and using a recurve-decurve bow, with a shorter overall length, and higher brace height cause the string to behave differently. So I'm glad for whatever you do, you don't need it.