Video was on point. I thought, no offense, i would be bored because it's not my thing but once again I was proven wrong. Love the video layout and transitions. part VO and VI (voice in???) flowed so well. I need to up my video game.
Thank you so much bud! Yeah I was definitely worried that it would be too niche, so this makes me really happy. AND I was super nervous for the different format, so I'm glad it worked for you!
Estimado Ethan,no estes nervioso, no das exámenes.....estas brindando lo mejor de vos,más en estos tiempos tán difíciles,mil gracias. Te digo para que veas de cuanto valor es lo que enseñas ,me estoy ganando el sustento para ayudar ,GRACIAS
The baseball stitch can conform to irregular shapes really well. That's a lot of why steering wheels and baseballs use it. It also handles stress from odd angles pretty well.
@@EthanCarterDesigns Thank you, it did! I went with the corset stitch and I'm super happy with how it looks! The leather I chose has a really nice top grain pattern, and is really comfortable!
@@TheLivingBlobfish That's great! The corset stitch is probably my favorite! A leather wrapped X-Acto is so much nicer to use I think (plus it looks cool!)
@@EthanCarterDesigns Absolutely! And I've found that feeling the stitch line with my fingers lets me orient the blade downward without even having to really look Also, I'm just stoked about an X-acto in the first place, I just got my first one after using a utility knife for two years (it's SO MUCH BETTER!)
I'm currently in the third phase of crafting my wife's Xmax gift, and for this part of her gift I had to sew leather. I've never sewn before in my life, and this may be the first time ive touched real leather too, who knows. Anyway, thanks for the help and also, I noticed part way through we share the same first name, cheers mate.
I learned to use quilter's double stick tape as they are very thin and come in very narrow widths. By placing the double stick tape down the middle inside surface of the leather then position it on the project piece. This aids in keeping the leather in position while stitching. The end result is a straight seam. As the individual craftsperson gains more experience, less dependence with the double stick tape is needed and by maintaining and proper adjustment to thread tension the craftsperson can maintain a straight seam. Your thoughts?
Thank you so much bud! That's exactly what I hoped for...to at least be accessible to people who have never done anything with leather! Really appreciate it man!
@@seinarukishi9228 It can really depend on the leather, pricking irons, and what you're hammering on top of - for example, thick leather just on a regular table with entry level pricking irons, it can take a lot and be loud. Whereas if you punching through thinner leather on top of a piece of granite with higher end pricking irons , it takes a lot less force and is quieter. Those are two extremes, but hopefully that helps.
I wish you had made this video a while ago. I spent so much time searching for a concise video about stitching on the youtubes when Morley made the leather patch for my backpack.
New sub! Thanks so very much for the extremely helpful tutorial! I'm going to watch it a few times as I practice. I'm brand new to the craft and very excited about making beautiful things out of leather. Thanks again!!
Awesome, thank you so much and I'm glad it was helpful! I'm so excited you're getting into the craft, it's truly so rewarding! Please feel free to reach out with questions whenever!!!
Just a heads up an out your volume. I haven’t looked for one of your most recent videos, but in this one the input volume is obviously very low. It’s always a good idea to get the recorded volume up a bit so the viewer doesn’t have to leg their listening volume all the way up. Makes for cleaner listening sound. Great video. 👍🏻😎👍🏻
Great video I love how concise, yet thorough you presented the information. I've been trying to get into leather work lately and was wondering if there's a general rule of thumb for how much thread to cut off for a project. I would just prefer to not waste so much thread because I plan to sell my items, and I'd like to cut costs. Thanks!
Thank you so much! The general rule as far as I know is the thread should be 4 times as long as whatever you're stitching, but I like to go a little longer just in case because it can be different depending on the thickness of what you're stitching too.
I wish every leather working video didn't assume we want to go out and buy one of those little hole poking fork thingies. Grrr. I'm not even sure how to poke nice clean holes without it. I guess I'll try to sharpen a fork or something. The rest of the video was awesome and very helpful. Thank you bro.
Great video and right on point. Can you help me with how much thread to use for each stitch? For example, on the saddle stitch I generally measure 5-6 times the length of the seam. Do you know what that should be for the corset and baseball stitches?
Thank you, glad you enjoyed it! The "general rule" for stitching two pieces of leather together is 4-times the length of the distance you're stitching. With that said, there can be a lot of variables that can impact it like the thickness of the leather or the thread, etc...so what I always tell people when I'm teaching my class is thread is cheap relative to your time and frustration and nothing is worse than getting close to the end and running out of thread and having to start over. So I say use WAY more than you think you'll need even if you end up wasting a little thread - Maybe 6-8 times the distance. Just my suggestion though. It should be pretty similar for the other two stitches as well if the stitch line is close to the edge like in this video. Hope that helps!
@@EthanCarterDesigns It does, thanks! I used 5x for a steering wheel I just baseball stitched and while it's challenging to have that much thread all around the steering wheel, blinkers and other obstructions, it came out great. Thanks!
Thank you so much! That's exactly what I'm hoping...people have seen me stitch so many times now, but hopefully a little more in depth will inspire some people to try it too!
Nice! One thing… I believe they use the baseball stitch on a baseball specifically because of it's ability to withstand THOUSANDS of lbs. of pressure. 6 to 8,000lbs. It's stitching is designed to withstand a 90+mph ball changing direction in an instant to 110+mph ball going the opposite direction. It actually flattens to half it's original diameter. I think the fact that when you tighten the lace… you do so by moving into a more secure direction… as if to pull it tighter… unlike the other methods of fastening? In other words… the corset method wouldn't hold on a baseball. Anyway… it's just a thought. Thank you, for sharing!
@@EthanCarterDesigns - not a problem! Not at all… especially since you share your knowledge with us. Very helpful skills, you possess there! THANK YOU!
Also I wish I didn't need two needles. I was lucky enough to find one sewing needle let alone two. Grr.. I guess if I wanted to make this a career I would invest in the tools I need but honestly I'm just trying to make this wallet and then I'm retiring from the leather making industry. Lol. Also. Dude have you ever considered hand making a complete baseball mitt? That would be super cool.
Hey chief very informative video. Corsett stitch was the one I was looking for. Also what size mm or guage leather thickness were you using to wrap up the exacto knife? Thanks
Really great video Ethan! So many tools I've never seen or heard of. I'll have to get some tips from you if I ever integrate leather into any furniture pieces
Type of thread you use? And if you want to do corset or baseball stitch, how do you measure the length of leather you want? Just wrap it around whatever your wrapping til desired length?
There's a link in the description for the thread I use - I tend to use thinner thread than most people though. Yes, that's what I do to measure because it differs depending on thickness of leather, so I just creep up on the length...basically you want the two edges to just barely be touching.
Most people say 3.5 -4 times the length of the seam length. I tend to go 4.5x just to be safe...thread is not SUPER expensive, and there's nothing worse than coming up short right before you get to the end...but that's a personal preference.
Kind of off topic, but how awesome would it be if Sinabroks or someone else finally made a chisel with individual removable teeth... I still can't wrap my mind around sharpening them when they're all close together
@@EthanCarterDesigns The zoom and whip transitions between the different stitches seemed perfect for this video especially since you matched it with the outro. We thought it was a nice touch! Gotta appreciate the little things haha
Thank you so much. That's a great question - I kind of eyeball it to be honest and tend to lean on the longer side. It may waste some thread, but it's better than getting close to the end and not having enough. I haven't actually validated that this rule of thumb works, but I've read that you need 3.5 to 4.5 times the length of the stitch line you're trying to stitch.
I've been doing leather work for about a year now and I've found the length required will depend on the thickness of the leather its going through. Obviously you need 2 lengths as a base (cos you have 2 needles on the same thread). If the total thickness is the same length as that between each stitch hole then 4x length (plus a bit extra, maybe 10-20cm) should enough but if its thicker then more length, of course. As much as I don't like wasting thread, I'd rather over cut it than to under cut it and be left short!
thank you for such a useful tutorial my 1st ever leather stitching job will be digital piano cover, because I need to use 2 shorter pieces, to over the whole piano. which stitch would you recommend for that? I feel like adding a narrow strip of leather underneath 2 main pieces, like a seam, to make it truly dust proof. I feel that without that narrow strip, the dust would still be penetrating the stitched gap. but of course I'm writing this as a total newbie, so I am open to a better solution, or suggestion. cheers!
I think that makes a lot of sense to add a strip of leather or other material to connect the seam. I would probably do two rows of the saddle stitch, one one each side of the seam down the strip if that makes sense.
@@EthanCarterDesigns thank you for your prompt reply! Yes I think I'll stitch 2 big pieces together first with 15 mm fold on each piece. Then stitch a thin strip over the ends folded out flat. I don't want to use glue though as I live in tropics and I'd be very paranoid about that glue melting or something and filling the gaps around my piano Middle C key Thanks again for the advice!
Great video! How do you accurately measure the leather to fit around an object, like the exact knife, so it's not too big or small? Is there a trick to that?
I don't have an official trick, but what I usually try to do is get it close but a little bigger and then sneak up on it until the two edges of the leather just barely touch, that way when you do the corset or baseball stich it pulls the two edges together if that makes sense.
Thanks for sharing. If I understand you, with the baseball stitch and the corset stitch the two leather edges do NOT overlap. You just butt them up as close as possible, is that correct?
Some great sewing techniques. I'm going to be trying them. And thanks for seeing and liking my latest handbag post on IG. To get an endorsement that my first hand bag was OK from someone I follow closely meand a lot.
Thank you so much! I really appreciate it! And that bag was awesome - can't believe it was your first one! Let me know if you have any questions as you try the stitches!
Here's what I could find on the difference: "The handsewn saddle stitch creates leather goods that last much longer. In addition to using thicker thread with hand stitching, each stitch is made up of two strong, independent, stitches. Unlike the lock stitch which will completely unravel, if a thread does break, the saddle stitch will still hold together."
You said I could ask you anything, so here goes: I'm confused about Bevelers. I see guys on RUclips using bevelers that have a steep angle. This makes perfect sense to me as I watch them widen and manipulate knife lines. When the guys at the leather store sold me a beveler it was perfectly flat when held upright. Is this just something I need to learn, i.e., holding the beveler at a severe angle in order to achieve what I see people doing with bevelers of a different geometry? Did they just give me the wrong tool? I searched the Tandy site and the one they gave me at the store matches what is called a beveler on the site. This is just strange.
I wonder if you're thinking of skivers vs. bevelers. Edge bevelers are used to remove a small amount of material around the edges of something like a wallet so that when you edge burnish the edges you get more or a round edge and don't get a little "lip". I have the Tandy edge beveler and use it at probably around a 30 degree angle when beveling the edges. Skiving knives on the other hand are used to thin out sections of the leather to make it easier to bend or wrap around something generally. There are LOTS of different types of those which can definitely get confusing. Not sure I answered your question, and if I didn't let me know and I'll try again. Here's a video that explains edge bevelers too in case it helps ruclips.net/video/KOme0XyRFXI/видео.html
Joe Meling RUclips channel. Video is called "Improve your leather tooling in less than 30 minutes" at the 20 second mark, he is holding the tool I'm referring to. He calls it a Beveler. I'm not sure if the name of the tool has changed and it's an outdated tool or name of tge tool or what. I'm confused. Thanks Mr. Carter
@@richardanderson4916 Ohhh ok for tooling leather - I don't have much experience with tooling, but I think what you're looking for is called a "Beveler Stamp" and there are lots of different sizes and texture options from what I can see . Here's the link to Tandy that has 7 different options - tandyleather.com/search?type=article%2Cpage%2Cproduct&q=Beverler*+Stamp*
Terrific! Very clear tutorial. QUESTION: I've an old leather briefcase I'd like to restore. It has dry rotted machine double stitching; stiff, dried out leather, and it needs to be dyed. I realize that I can't stitch the leather as it is dried out and stiff, until I "condition" it to make it more supple, however I don't know whether to dye it before conditioning or after conditioning - what does the expert suggest? Many thanks!
Just some insight…. I’m not sure if the video was slightly sped up, but I’ve gone back in the first 5 minutes and still not quite sure how to do the stitch. Some of the film work could have been more close up for us who have never touched a needle and thread.
Ethan, I'm a beginner and need advice. I had a copper stamp made so I can burn my name into each project but the leather shrinks and distorts it. Advice much appreciated Pamela Tasmania Australia
I have actually never used my branding iron on leather, so I'm probably not going to be able to provide much advice other than just try different levels of heat which I'm sure you've already tried. You could also just use the stamp to deboss it...won't have the same color contrast, but could be a good option.
Question for you. On the stitching pony it looked like second needle was pulled thru the center of the loop (pulled the string over the top of needle) when passing thru. On the one you didn’t use the pony it definitely didn’t pass thru the center of the loop. Am I just seeing things? lol what is correct?
Good eye! And yes, I think the proper way is to pass it through the center of the loop (at least from other's videos I've watched), so I showed it that way, but I've never noticed a difference, so I tend not to worry about it when I'm not using the pony because it's easier. Great question and thanks for paying so much attention!
Is there any "formula" to determine the length of thread needed for a certain length of leather -- for each stitch type ? I guess CORSETTE & BASEBALL are about the same ... THNX
There's no perfect formula because it also depends on how thick the leather is, how many layers you are stitching, etc... but I know people sometimes use 4 times the length of the piece you are stitching as an approximate length. I tend to air on the longer/more than I need though - there's nothing worse than getting close to the end and running out of thread. Yes, the corset and baseball stitch use essentially the same amount.
@@EthanCarterDesigns “..to ERR... “ thanks, I found that advice of 4X... It worked well for my application... As you said the thickness and length are important.. best
Most people go with the thread being 4 times the length of what you're stitching. I usually go a little longer than that because there's nothing worse then running out of thread right before the end and also the thickness of material can also mean more or less thread is needed.
I am making a blanket out of lamb skin it’s going to be made up of lots of pieces (it’s going to be made up of triangles) unfortunately I don’t think any of these would work I want it to be as flat as possible and I can’t pre-punch the holes advice would be helpful
Hey I’m interested in what that plate you use is called it’s clear want one ik you can use other things but looks like something I’d rather use :) god bless
Thank you for the interest! I am not sure I know what you're referring to though...are you looking for a template for the wallet I am stitching up in this video or maybe the wood and leather box I keep all my stitching supplies in?
Hey. I'm looking into getting a dent iron or a diamond iron. I want to use dent iron because I like the round shape but I'm curious if it would look weird with a corset stitch? I'm looking to get the ksblade ones
I actually have never used a round dent punch, but I definitely think it would look fine with the corset stitch. The angle of the diamond punches makes more of a difference with the saddle stitch because it gives it that slanted look from my understanding. Hope that helps!
@@EthanCarterDesigns I see, I practiced with a 1mm hole for corset stitch but holes look different compared to with a diamond iron. I guess I would be getting the diamond thanks!
Yes, one long thread with a needle attached at each end. Sorry for the speed...for every comment I get about it being too fast, I get an equal amount of comments about how great the pace is...hard to please everyone, but I'm always happy to answer questions like this if something isn't clear.
Video was on point. I thought, no offense, i would be bored because it's not my thing but once again I was proven wrong. Love the video layout and transitions. part VO and VI (voice in???) flowed so well. I need to up my video game.
Thank you so much bud! Yeah I was definitely worried that it would be too niche, so this makes me really happy. AND I was super nervous for the different format, so I'm glad it worked for you!
Estimado Ethan,no estes nervioso, no das exámenes.....estas brindando lo mejor de vos,más en estos tiempos tán difíciles,mil gracias.
Te digo para que veas de cuanto valor es lo que enseñas ,me estoy ganando el sustento para ayudar ,GRACIAS
The baseball stitch can conform to irregular shapes really well. That's a lot of why steering wheels and baseballs use it. It also handles stress from odd angles pretty well.
I went in search of other stitches (not saddle) because I was also giving my Exact-o a cover! You might even say it was EXACTLY what I needed!
Hahaha nice one! Awesome, I hope it helped!
@@EthanCarterDesigns Thank you, it did! I went with the corset stitch and I'm super happy with how it looks! The leather I chose has a really nice top grain pattern, and is really comfortable!
@@TheLivingBlobfish That's great! The corset stitch is probably my favorite! A leather wrapped X-Acto is so much nicer to use I think (plus it looks cool!)
@@EthanCarterDesigns Absolutely! And I've found that feeling the stitch line with my fingers lets me orient the blade downward without even having to really look
Also, I'm just stoked about an X-acto in the first place, I just got my first one after using a utility knife for two years (it's SO MUCH BETTER!)
@@TheLivingBlobfish That's a great point, I think I do the same thing without even realizing it! Oh yeah, definitely way nicer for almost everything!
Dude, you always make this stuff look so easy!
Haha I appreciate it!
I'm currently in the third phase of crafting my wife's Xmax gift, and for this part of her gift I had to sew leather. I've never sewn before in my life, and this may be the first time ive touched real leather too, who knows. Anyway, thanks for the help and also, I noticed part way through we share the same first name, cheers mate.
Ethan's gotta stick together! That's awesome man, I hope you enjoy working with leather! Feel free to hit me up with any questions as you get started!
Hi Ethan and Ethan!
You are very thorough in your instructions. Good teacher. Keep it up.
Thank you so much - I definitely strive to be a good teacher, so that means a lot!
I agree with many other comments.
Your camera work is professional.
Thank you so much, I really appreciate it!
Exactly what I needed to know. Very concise, well spoken, and straight to the point. Thank you so much man! I appreciate it 🙏🏼
Thank you so much - I'm so happy you found it helpful!!!
one of the most under rated tutorials! thank you mate! you’re a gentleman!
Thank you so much for that, I really appreciate it!
The baseball stitch isn’t as tight because you’re not keeping the tension. Thank you for the video though very informative :))
Ethan, you’re a great teacher. Thanks for the well-organized, very helpful demonstrations!
Thank you so much for the kind words! I really hope to be a good teacher, so that means a lot!
I’m guessing the baseball stitch is used is because it is used for joining leather edge to edge on curved surfaces
Good point!
Thank you for your very helpful video on these three stitches.
You are so welcome and thanks for checking it out!
I learned to use quilter's double stick tape as they are very thin and come in very narrow widths. By placing the double stick tape down the middle inside surface of the leather then position it on the project piece. This aids in keeping the leather in position while stitching. The end result is a straight seam. As the individual craftsperson gains more experience, less dependence with the double stick tape is needed and by maintaining and proper adjustment to thread tension the craftsperson can maintain a straight seam. Your thoughts?
Very good video, rather helpful as I'm just starting out and can't stitch for toffees, I've bookmarked it, Thank You for this..😃
Thank you so much for that and I'm glad you found it helpful! Hit me up any time if you run into any questions!
Great video Ethan! I have exactly zero minutes of leather working experience and I feel like I was able to follow along. Great little tutorial!
Thank you so much bud! That's exactly what I hoped for...to at least be accessible to people who have never done anything with leather! Really appreciate it man!
Just amazing! I'm starting some projects on leather and this is EXACTLY what I needed! Thank tou!
That's awesome, I'm so glad it was helpful!
How hard do you have to hammer? I live in an apartment and am looking at incorporating leather into my stitching soon.
@@seinarukishi9228 It can really depend on the leather, pricking irons, and what you're hammering on top of - for example, thick leather just on a regular table with entry level pricking irons, it can take a lot and be loud. Whereas if you punching through thinner leather on top of a piece of granite with higher end pricking irons , it takes a lot less force and is quieter. Those are two extremes, but hopefully that helps.
شكرا 🙏🙏🙏
Thanks from egypy 🇾🇪🇾🇪🇾🇪
Thank YOU! I appreciate it
This was great info! Thanks for taking the time to make this!
I'm so glad you found it helpful! Thank you!
Great illustration.
Thank you so much!!!
I wish you had made this video a while ago. I spent so much time searching for a concise video about stitching on the youtubes when Morley made the leather patch for my backpack.
I wish I had made this a while ago too - I've been talking about it for way too long! Glad you thought it would have helped, thanks bud!
excellent video.
please make video on making leather blueprint tube or map case... please sir. its a request.
Thank you! Hmm never thought about making one of those - if I do, I'll definitely let you know!
ok@@EthanCarterDesigns
New sub! Thanks so very much for the extremely helpful tutorial! I'm going to watch it a few times as I practice. I'm brand new to the craft and very excited about making beautiful things out of leather. Thanks again!!
Awesome, thank you so much and I'm glad it was helpful! I'm so excited you're getting into the craft, it's truly so rewarding! Please feel free to reach out with questions whenever!!!
Well done -nice easy explained video--so clear and informative 0----thankyou
Thank you so much! I'm so glad you found it helpful and enjoyed it!
Nice work keep up the great craftsmanship and hard work keep making
Thank you so much! That means a lot!
Ethan Carter Designs ur very welcome my friend
Great video Ethan. Always impressed with anyone that does leather work. You make it seem like even a goof like me could do it. Great tutorial.
Thanks man! Haha trust me, if I can do it, anyone can!
Great video, Ethan! It was so informative! I think the corset stitch is my favorite.
Thank you so much Bruce! Yeah I think it's my favorite too!
Nicely done
Thank you so much!
Great stuff, Ethan! You taught me the baseball stitch-- thanks for the great video. Exceptionally concise and easy to watch (and learn).
Thank you so much man! I really appreciate it and am really happy it was easy to follow! The baseball stitch is fun, right?!
Great explanation and presentation.
Thank you so much Tony!
Nice job Ethan! Now I need to practice!
Thank you so much bud! Haha based on your other work, I doubt you need much practice!
Just a heads up an out your volume. I haven’t looked for one of your most recent videos, but in this one the input volume is obviously very low. It’s always a good idea to get the recorded volume up a bit so the viewer doesn’t have to leg their listening volume all the way up. Makes for cleaner listening sound. Great video. 👍🏻😎👍🏻
Great video I love how concise, yet thorough you presented the information. I've been trying to get into leather work lately and was wondering if there's a general rule of thumb for how much thread to cut off for a project. I would just prefer to not waste so much thread because I plan to sell my items, and I'd like to cut costs. Thanks!
Thank you so much! The general rule as far as I know is the thread should be 4 times as long as whatever you're stitching, but I like to go a little longer just in case because it can be different depending on the thickness of what you're stitching too.
Nice work, Ethan. Very informative. I'm getting started with leather and will be referring back to this video.
Thank you Jacob! I'm pumped to hear you're getting started with leather working - let me know if you have any questions or anything!
I wish every leather working video didn't assume we want to go out and buy one of those little hole poking fork thingies. Grrr. I'm not even sure how to poke nice clean holes without it. I guess I'll try to sharpen a fork or something. The rest of the video was awesome and very helpful. Thank you bro.
Great video, thanks very much.
Thank you so much!
Great video Ethan! You should smile more, lol, I love your positive attitude all the time!
Thanks bud! Hahaha what you don't see is all the swearing in between take 30-35 of trying to get a usable 10 second intro haha
Keep up the good work !
So much great information in this one, great job Ethan 👍
Thank you so much bud!
Excelente su trabajo.... ES PERFECTO
Great video. I tried the link for the thread but it wasn’t available. Any chance you can post it again please? Thanks!
Thank you so much! I just updated the thread link for one that should work!
Thank you very much for this video
It very helpful
You are so welcome! I'm glad you found it useful!
Good job 👍 Sir
Thank you so much!
Awesome vid and instructions.. thanks man
Thank you so much! I'm glad it was helpful!
Great video and right on point. Can you help me with how much thread to use for each stitch? For example, on the saddle stitch I generally measure 5-6 times the length of the seam. Do you know what that should be for the corset and baseball stitches?
Thank you, glad you enjoyed it! The "general rule" for stitching two pieces of leather together is 4-times the length of the distance you're stitching. With that said, there can be a lot of variables that can impact it like the thickness of the leather or the thread, etc...so what I always tell people when I'm teaching my class is thread is cheap relative to your time and frustration and nothing is worse than getting close to the end and running out of thread and having to start over. So I say use WAY more than you think you'll need even if you end up wasting a little thread - Maybe 6-8 times the distance. Just my suggestion though. It should be pretty similar for the other two stitches as well if the stitch line is close to the edge like in this video. Hope that helps!
@@EthanCarterDesigns It does, thanks! I used 5x for a steering wheel I just baseball stitched and while it's challenging to have that much thread all around the steering wheel, blinkers and other obstructions, it came out great. Thanks!
Great video
Thank you so much, glad you enjoyed it!
Well done! Even though I saw you do the corset stitch on the infinity light video, it was cool to have a more in depth explanation.
Thank you so much! That's exactly what I'm hoping...people have seen me stitch so many times now, but hopefully a little more in depth will inspire some people to try it too!
Nice!
One thing…
I believe they use the baseball stitch on a baseball specifically because of it's ability to withstand THOUSANDS of lbs. of pressure. 6 to 8,000lbs.
It's stitching is designed to withstand a 90+mph ball changing direction in an instant to 110+mph ball going the opposite direction. It actually flattens to half it's original diameter.
I think the fact that when you tighten the lace… you do so by moving into a more secure direction… as if to pull it tighter… unlike the other methods of fastening?
In other words… the corset method wouldn't hold on a baseball.
Anyway… it's just a thought.
Thank you, for sharing!
That's super interesting, I had no idea about all of that! Thanks for sharing!
@@EthanCarterDesigns - not a problem!
Not at all… especially since you share your knowledge with us.
Very helpful skills, you possess there!
THANK YOU!
Also I wish I didn't need two needles. I was lucky enough to find one sewing needle let alone two. Grr.. I guess if I wanted to make this a career I would invest in the tools I need but honestly I'm just trying to make this wallet and then I'm retiring from the leather making industry. Lol. Also. Dude have you ever considered hand making a complete baseball mitt? That would be super cool.
Hey chief very informative video. Corsett stitch was the one I was looking for. Also what size mm or guage leather thickness were you using to wrap up the exacto knife? Thanks
Thank you so much, appreciate it! The leather I was using is approx 1.8 mm thick.
Muy buena explicacion,muchas gracias, desde Argentina te saludamos
Thank you so much! I really appreciate it!
Good stuff buddy! Very informative and helpful
Thank you so much bud!
Really great video Ethan! So many tools I've never seen or heard of. I'll have to get some tips from you if I ever integrate leather into any furniture pieces
Thank you so much! Absolutely - I'd love to talk shop, tips, and techniques whenever you want!
Seems like the baseball stitch could also be called the "shoe lace up" stitch! Informative, thanks.
Ha good point! Thank you so much!
Cool video. Nice instructions. Have never seen that thread melting tool before. Looks very useful. Mahalo for sharing. : )
Thank you so much! Right?! It's obviously a very specific tool, but it comes in super handy if do a lot of stitching!
Type of thread you use? And if you want to do corset or baseball stitch, how do you measure the length of leather you want? Just wrap it around whatever your wrapping til desired length?
There's a link in the description for the thread I use - I tend to use thinner thread than most people though. Yes, that's what I do to measure because it differs depending on thickness of leather, so I just creep up on the length...basically you want the two edges to just barely be touching.
Very helpful thank you
Thank you so much, glad it was helpful!
Great video Ethan!
Thank you so much bud! Really appreciate it!
Great video Ethan! Those stitch patterns look really nice!
Thank you so much! I really appreciate it!
Great video!
Thank you so much man!
Very helpful.
I'm so glad! Thank you!
Quick question I didn't see an answer to: How much thread? 3x the seam length? 4x 10x? Great video thanks in advance.
Most people say 3.5 -4 times the length of the seam length. I tend to go 4.5x just to be safe...thread is not SUPER expensive, and there's nothing worse than coming up short right before you get to the end...but that's a personal preference.
Thanks
Kind of off topic, but how awesome would it be if Sinabroks or someone else finally made a chisel with individual removable teeth... I still can't wrap my mind around sharpening them when they're all close together
Yeah, I think you're on to something, that would be really great if they did!
Found one on Aliexpress, supposedly extremely sharp and well made. We'll see once it arrives. @@EthanCarterDesigns
That intro though! Loved the video, it's so informative!
You like the intro?! Thank you so much!
@@EthanCarterDesigns The zoom and whip transitions between the different stitches seemed perfect for this video especially since you matched it with the outro. We thought it was a nice touch! Gotta appreciate the little things haha
@@IMEEMADE You guys are the best! This was the first time I tried some fancy transitions and I'm so pumped you guys picked up on them!!!
@@EthanCarterDesigns @bevelishcreations would be proud! :)
@@IMEEMADE Umm yeah he 100% inspired the transitions, but I still didn't come close to his execution haha!
Excelente!!!! Muchas Gracias!!!
Thank you so much!
Awesome. Thankyou
You're so welcome!
Well done. Any rule on knowing how much thread you need?
Thank you so much. That's a great question - I kind of eyeball it to be honest and tend to lean on the longer side. It may waste some thread, but it's better than getting close to the end and not having enough. I haven't actually validated that this rule of thumb works, but I've read that you need 3.5 to 4.5 times the length of the stitch line you're trying to stitch.
I've been doing leather work for about a year now and I've found the length required will depend on the thickness of the leather its going through. Obviously you need 2 lengths as a base (cos you have 2 needles on the same thread).
If the total thickness is the same length as that between each stitch hole then 4x length (plus a bit extra, maybe 10-20cm) should enough but if its thicker then more length, of course.
As much as I don't like wasting thread, I'd rather over cut it than to under cut it and be left short!
thank you for such a useful tutorial
my 1st ever leather stitching job will be digital piano cover, because I need to use 2 shorter pieces, to over the whole piano.
which stitch would you recommend for that?
I feel like adding a narrow strip of leather underneath 2 main pieces, like a seam, to make it truly dust proof. I feel that without that narrow strip, the dust would still be penetrating the stitched gap.
but of course I'm writing this as a total newbie, so I am open to a better solution, or suggestion. cheers!
I think that makes a lot of sense to add a strip of leather or other material to connect the seam. I would probably do two rows of the saddle stitch, one one each side of the seam down the strip if that makes sense.
@@EthanCarterDesigns thank you for your prompt reply!
Yes I think I'll stitch 2 big pieces together first with 15 mm fold on each piece. Then stitch a thin strip over the ends folded out flat.
I don't want to use glue though as I live in tropics and I'd be very paranoid about that glue melting or something and filling the gaps around my piano Middle C key
Thanks again for the advice!
@@TigerCarpenter I think that sounds like a solid plan for sure! Let me know how it turns out!
Great video! How do you accurately measure the leather to fit around an object, like the exact knife, so it's not too big or small? Is there a trick to that?
I don't have an official trick, but what I usually try to do is get it close but a little bigger and then sneak up on it until the two edges of the leather just barely touch, that way when you do the corset or baseball stich it pulls the two edges together if that makes sense.
Thanks for sharing. If I understand you, with the baseball stitch and the corset stitch the two leather edges do NOT overlap. You just butt them up as close as possible, is that correct?
Some great sewing techniques. I'm going to be trying them. And thanks for seeing and liking my latest handbag post on IG. To get an endorsement that my first hand bag was OK from someone I follow closely meand a lot.
Thank you so much! I really appreciate it! And that bag was awesome - can't believe it was your first one! Let me know if you have any questions as you try the stitches!
Is your saddle stitch actually a " lockstitch" ? Or what's the difference if you don't loop the thread over the needle? Saddle vs. Lockstitch?
Here's what I could find on the difference: "The handsewn saddle stitch creates leather goods that last much longer. In addition to using thicker thread with hand stitching, each stitch is made up of two strong, independent, stitches. Unlike the lock stitch which will completely unravel, if a thread does break, the saddle stitch will still hold together."
@@EthanCarterDesigns Thank you
@@woowaptibam5253 Anytime!
What kind of stitching luxury purses use like Chanel and Hermes bags ?
You said I could ask you anything, so here goes: I'm confused about Bevelers. I see guys on RUclips using bevelers that have a steep angle. This makes perfect sense to me as I watch them widen and manipulate knife lines. When the guys at the leather store sold me a beveler it was perfectly flat when held upright. Is this just something I need to learn, i.e., holding the beveler at a severe angle in order to achieve what I see people doing with bevelers of a different geometry? Did they just give me the wrong tool? I searched the Tandy site and the one they gave me at the store matches what is called a beveler on the site. This is just strange.
I wonder if you're thinking of skivers vs. bevelers. Edge bevelers are used to remove a small amount of material around the edges of something like a wallet so that when you edge burnish the edges you get more or a round edge and don't get a little "lip". I have the Tandy edge beveler and use it at probably around a 30 degree angle when beveling the edges. Skiving knives on the other hand are used to thin out sections of the leather to make it easier to bend or wrap around something generally. There are LOTS of different types of those which can definitely get confusing. Not sure I answered your question, and if I didn't let me know and I'll try again. Here's a video that explains edge bevelers too in case it helps ruclips.net/video/KOme0XyRFXI/видео.html
Joe Meling RUclips channel. Video is called "Improve your leather tooling in less than 30 minutes" at the 20 second mark, he is holding the tool I'm referring to. He calls it a Beveler. I'm not sure if the name of the tool has changed and it's an outdated tool or name of tge tool or what. I'm confused. Thanks Mr. Carter
@@richardanderson4916 Ohhh ok for tooling leather - I don't have much experience with tooling, but I think what you're looking for is called a "Beveler Stamp" and there are lots of different sizes and texture options from what I can see . Here's the link to Tandy that has 7 different options - tandyleather.com/search?type=article%2Cpage%2Cproduct&q=Beverler*+Stamp*
Terrific! Very clear tutorial.
QUESTION: I've an old leather briefcase I'd like to restore. It has dry rotted machine double stitching; stiff, dried out leather, and it needs to be dyed.
I realize that I can't stitch the leather as it is dried out and stiff, until I "condition" it to make it more supple, however I don't know whether to dye it before conditioning or after conditioning - what does the expert suggest?
Many thanks!
Condition before AND after dying. If it’s overly dry to begin with, it will absolutely inhale the dye.
@@bhronnyhill9354
That confirms my thoughts - thanks!
Great video Ethan! You made me feel like I could actually do this even though I can't even tie my own shoes. :)
Thanks Drew! Maybe you should try stitching your shoes?!
Very nice 👍 💐
Thank you so much!
Just some insight…. I’m not sure if the video was slightly sped up, but I’ve gone back in the first 5 minutes and still not quite sure how to do the stitch. Some of the film work could have been more close up for us who have never touched a needle and thread.
I need this tools
@Ethan Carter Designs Hello. Can you please tell me exactly which thread, by name, you are using?
There's a link in the description to the exact thread I used in this video. I hope that helps!
@@EthanCarterDesigns Yes very much! Thank you for getting back to me!
Hi. What size chisel did you work with?
I use 3.85 mm chisels most of the time.
Ethan, I'm a beginner and need advice. I had a copper stamp made so I can burn my name into each project but the leather shrinks and distorts it. Advice much appreciated Pamela Tasmania Australia
I have actually never used my branding iron on leather, so I'm probably not going to be able to provide much advice other than just try different levels of heat which I'm sure you've already tried. You could also just use the stamp to deboss it...won't have the same color contrast, but could be a good option.
Good info, bud!
Where is the link to the stitching pony?
I'm not sure he's still making them, so I removed the link, but he's on IG under the handle @wingandwavedesigns if you want to reach out about one.
What stitch would you use to butt the end together but one side is a bit longer than the other, so that it might make a small pucker?
Question for you. On the stitching pony it looked like second needle was pulled thru the center of the loop (pulled the string over the top of needle) when passing thru. On the one you didn’t use the pony it definitely didn’t pass thru the center of the loop. Am I just seeing things? lol what is correct?
Good eye! And yes, I think the proper way is to pass it through the center of the loop (at least from other's videos I've watched), so I showed it that way, but I've never noticed a difference, so I tend not to worry about it when I'm not using the pony because it's easier. Great question and thanks for paying so much attention!
That's exactly why I came to the comment section. Thanks so much for asking this question!
Thank you
Thank you for checking it out!
Nice!
Thank you so much!
Is there any "formula" to determine the length of thread needed for a certain length of leather -- for each stitch type ? I guess CORSETTE & BASEBALL are about the same ...
THNX
There's no perfect formula because it also depends on how thick the leather is, how many layers you are stitching, etc... but I know people sometimes use 4 times the length of the piece you are stitching as an approximate length. I tend to air on the longer/more than I need though - there's nothing worse than getting close to the end and running out of thread. Yes, the corset and baseball stitch use essentially the same amount.
@@EthanCarterDesigns
“..to ERR... “
thanks, I found that advice of 4X...
It worked well for my application...
As you said the thickness and length are important..
best
How do you predict how much thread to use, i always end up using too much and getting tangled
Most people go with the thread being 4 times the length of what you're stitching. I usually go a little longer than that because there's nothing worse then running out of thread right before the end and also the thickness of material can also mean more or less thread is needed.
I am making a blanket out of lamb skin it’s going to be made up of lots of pieces (it’s going to be made up of triangles) unfortunately I don’t think any of these would work I want it to be as flat as possible and I can’t pre-punch the holes advice would be helpful
What kind of thread are you using? The one I have is so bulky compared to yours
It's 0.45mm White Polyester Wax Linen Thread - I have a link to it in the description under "Leatherworking Materials/Supplies"
Hey I’m interested in what that plate you use is called it’s clear want one ik you can use other things but looks like something I’d rather use :) god bless
A punch pad! duuh
It works pretty well, here's the link! amzn.to/3j0qxQ1
Bro do you have a pattern for that stitching purse I want one!!!!!
Thank you for the interest! I am not sure I know what you're referring to though...are you looking for a template for the wallet I am stitching up in this video or maybe the wood and leather box I keep all my stitching supplies in?
Hey. I'm looking into getting a dent iron or a diamond iron. I want to use dent iron because I like the round shape but I'm curious if it would look weird with a corset stitch? I'm looking to get the ksblade ones
I actually have never used a round dent punch, but I definitely think it would look fine with the corset stitch. The angle of the diamond punches makes more of a difference with the saddle stitch because it gives it that slanted look from my understanding. Hope that helps!
@@EthanCarterDesigns I see, I practiced with a 1mm hole for corset stitch but holes look different compared to with a diamond iron. I guess I would be getting the diamond thanks!
@@3AsianBoi Anytime!
Nice
Thank you so much!
Bro where’s the pattern for that stitching purse you got I want one!!!!!!
Awesome
Thank you so much!
What spacing Sinabrooks did you get?
I went with 3.85 I think.
Do you use one long thread with a needle on each end? Kinda hard to follow was way too fast even slowed down to .25
Yes, one long thread with a needle attached at each end. Sorry for the speed...for every comment I get about it being too fast, I get an equal amount of comments about how great the pace is...hard to please everyone, but I'm always happy to answer questions like this if something isn't clear.