Chuck, thank you for sharing your skills and passion for Leather. Many within this craft , withhold information as if they are guarded secrets. We all started somewhere, and learned from someone else...Thank you. Well done. Continue the great work.
Fantastic video! Anything we can make to help our firemen should be made with best quality we can find. That means WEAVER LEATHER!! Best regards, Richard
I have always wanted to get into leather crafting for utility purposes (knife sheaths, holsters, belts etc.). The one thing that has stopped me is that I am in no way artistic. The fancy tooling and flowers is beyond my desires (I am not the fancy type). After watching many many of your videos, my interest has peaked again. Thank You so much for showing just how simple it is to get started. 👍😁
I got started in October. I’m not artistic either, and have a hard time drawing a straight line with a ruler😂. I’ve had to take a break due to having rotator cuff surgery and I have watched many many hours of youtube videos on leatherworking. It may be cheating, but I discovered tooling the leather with a Cricut Maker vinyl cutter. It can cut and tool leather. I’ve been playing around with that until I can start using my right arm again.
Hi Weaver. Have a question. Where do you attach the little leather strap that hangs straight down at the end of the video. Is there any possibility that you could take a picture of what it looks like when it is used, and how the radio harness is worn. Thanks so much for all the great videos. Lots of fun projects. many greetings from Sweden.
The anti-sway strap hooks to a belt loop or carabiner on turnout pants. It keeps the radio from swinging around and hitting a patient, or getting in the way. You wear the strap like a crossbody bag. I wear mine on my left shoulder with my radio on my right side.