it is genuinely very interesting to me. Wood carving, pottery, leather working, etc they seem like jobs that are genuinely rewarding and are all crafts I'd love to get into
I mean if your crafty / handy you literally can do exactly that. Your seeing the entire process , so you can skip a lot of the errors this guy made to get this good.
Beautiful work my friend, when I was cowboying I used to make all sorts of crap out of the leftover leather scraps we had laying around the ranch. Made flask holders and hatbands of all types. It was pretty crude work but it was all original and made by hand and I did pretty good work considering what I had and what I made with it.
@@GoodOldOddity013 it’s just a different way of saying rancher/farmer, riding/training horses and working with/around/on animals and farm equipment. Cowboying is the type of thing you are pretty much Heinz 57 or the Jack of all trades when it comes to that line of work
@@RatsoMan20 why is that? Good clean cuts, skiving with the round knife, used clamps to have a nice set shape before hand sewing it down. Theres extra stuff you can do, but overall its a beautiful sheath.
I really like to stumble upon these kind of videos. You get a short vid about how something is made, something you have never wondered about, and it sparks new interest :D
Thanks for sharing. You have inspired people of all ages with your work. We might not all get a sheath that looks like a sheath, but at least we'll try :)
Baron and the Warpfrog team are genuinely the best devs out there. They did everything we asked for AND MORE and still want to do EVEN MORE. They hire modders instead of sue them (ahem… nintendo) and they get these people with hobbies a real job. Its so cool. Its so fun. I love these guys
@@Marijuana_Marmaladethe difference between those is based entirely on the order in which they happen. And you can see the wood came first, literally wrapped in the leather. Yes I should be doing actual work at my actual job shut up
@@Marijuana_MarmaladeAh, that is indeed a profound question. I can't consider it at the moment as I'm still processing the information that you can make marmalade from marijuana.
I love the sound of that leather being cut. I grew up in a small town and they took us to a tannery for scouts and we got to make belts it was so cool I really enjoyed it.
@@david162116162140 scabbards were made of a variety of materials, leather, metal and yes wood, all of them have their strengths and weaknesses and wood scabbards generally aren’t the best as they’re more likely to dull the blade
Whoa, for some reason this brought me so much peace, my mind is still. My brain races all over the place, non-stop chatter but watching this, my mind is quiet. I feel so peaceful. Thank you :)
Same, have ADHD, from PTSD. Making things has kept me alive. I grew up knitting, turns out it was my "fidget", but also a deep well of creativity as an outlet. Not a substitute for addressing it head-on, but has also saved me in contributing ways.
I was just wondering if I am the only oddball who has always found leather cutting sound and texture appealing? Obviously most of us must have some connections to working with it in our ancestors but its just odd how natural some things feel, Well its not odd, it’s humbling to remember what all life led up to who we are today. I find it sad that modern religion crams it all into an un real 7000 years or so. To overlook our evolution is just so depressing, I can’t imagine such a thing.
@@Vxlgardenfxiry well that was one of the reasons I started a youtube channel - so I can talk with people in the comments :) (oh and internet dollars of course :D )
Muito bom já rodou umas 7 vezes o vídeo e eu adoro o barulho de corte de couro, trabalhei alguns anos em curtume de pré acabamento onde fui operador de pintura e também operador de lixadeira... Parabéns
Work the leather. By hand. Without the use of industrial machinery I believe it is one of the many art forms that (at least as far as I'm concerned) should never be forgotten. Sometimes doing things the way they were done before can mean that it's worth taking a step back and looking from another perspective: the quality and uniqueness of a handmade product. it is incomparable. Thanks 😊
I was always wondering about those classes whenever I went to Sur la Table. I also heard that it’s kind of an advertisement for the kitchen tools that they sell. And I’m so glad that you had fun! It looks like a very fun date! 😊
Actually depends on your own design, some are far easier and faster but pros and cons. Leatherwork is a lot eaiser than you would think, but also much harder in some ways