How to Burnish Leather Edges
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- čas přidán 31. 05. 2024
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How to Burnish Leather Edges
Burnishing the edges of your leather crafting projects is an important step in finishing your pieces. Not only does burnishing leather edges make your piece look more finished and clean, it protect the edges from moisture and helps the leather crafting pieces last a lot longer!
We go through how to burnish leather both by hand and by machine. Both methods result in a beautiful, sealed edge that is coated in bee's wax and ready to be used for many years. Leather pieces can also be re-burnished at any time if you'd like to rejuvenate your existing leather products!
The love I have for leather is based on the fact that you are able to create beautiful, useful things that need zero electricity whilst making them. Not to mention the thousands of years of history the leathercraft has 😍
I’ve found sanding in both directions can sometimes raise the grain of the edge and make it “fluffy” or peel. sanding in one direction helps keep the leather slicked flat. I’ve experienced it with both veg tanned and chrome tanned. Doesn’t seem to always happen though (I usually sand back and forth without issue).
Crazy horse has this issue with fluffy edges. Couldn’t burnish it even once
Leather is a very fibrous material that has a bit of a wild pattern kind of like hair. Sanding and slicking in one direction is very much like combing your hair all in one direction. You'll get some extra loose volume by going multiple directions, but going in a single direction will slick it all over and seal it a lot better when you burnish it.
Leather is made of fibers.
Without reading the comments, I just made the same comparison with combing your hair. 😀
I love this channel. Can't wait to dive into leathercraft. Could there be a video on common mistakes beginners make?
Yes, I sure would also like to know this, too!
I can't even list the mistakes I've made since there's so many 😂
There is tons of books about this. I don't get why people don't read more books
We'll add it to our list! We do our best to point out common mistakes in the particular skill we're demonstrating, but I think a mistake overview video would be a great idea :)
Check out their sponsors CZcams, Weaver leather supply. Very helpful video on this there
What I really enjoy about watching your videos is the fact that no matter how long I've worked with leather I learn something new. This time..I have a burnishing machine, and I never new to start from the largest to the smallest...I always went to the proper size..great stuff..thanks again.
I'd seen the videos you did without narration...I kind of got the idea of what you were doing but didn't *totally* understand. Now I do. Thanks.
THE best video I've seen on burnishing.
You just have the nack for simplifying the leather crafting processes. This is the video I truly was waiting for. Burnishing is my biggest issue. Too many videos explain differently and half ass. Thanks again for the most simple burnishing tutorial. Chartermade does a very good job also. 👍🏽✊🏽✌🏽 &❤️
I love how you explain everything like an engineer 😀
Fantastic burnishing video, easy to follow. Thank you!
This cleared up so much. Thank you
5:44 I've found that a double layer of cheap masking tape works quite well to prevent scruffing the face.
I've also used it to completely cover a piece so I could have an erasable surface for sketching out scribing lines.
I’m just getting started in leather working and this video help me a lot thank you. I have a question I was hoping for some help can you do a video about different types of leather and the uses for them with projects?
Thank you. I picked up some great tips here..!!
Loved it, probably the best edge burnishing video out there. Thanks!!
I tried burnishing leather for the first time in the week and found it quite tricky! But this video definitely cleared a few things up for me. As you say it's trial and error until you find your style. Great video as always! 🙏🏾🙌🏽
Your skill videos are greatly appreciated. It is very useful to see your process to better understand how you produce such great pieces. Please keep the skills videos coming! I've learned so much from you both.
Liking the skills videos mixed in with project/tutorial videos. Thanks for creating and sharing them.
Loved the video. Straight to the point. Plenty of information with visuals without the fluff. Awesome job.
Great show and really help- and useful! Specially the process with burnishing!
I love and appreciate these tutorials.
I would like to thank you all for doing these skills videos. They are helping me a lot, as I dabble in leather work.
Thank you so much for this. Been learning leathercraft for a month now and your channel has helped SO MUCH. Thank you again. Cheers from Brazil!
Thank you so much for detailing tutorials.
Best video on Burnishing I've come across so far, great video
Love your videos, love the narration. Thank you!
Another awesome video! Thank you so much for your videos. Have a great day!
Miracle. Right when I was going to looking for a tutorial to learn how to burnish leather edges, this video appeared!
Now I know why artisan leather goods are expensive. I Love the small details that comes with leather crafting.
thank you for sharing your ways of working leather much appreciated!
Absolutely fantastic, Corter Leather! Thanks so much for doing these skill videos. I just started and they're invaluable. One thing I'd love to see is a tutorial on edge paint. Burnishing is great when the leather is similarly colored, but I'd like to use edge paint when there are different colors and so on. Keep doing what you're doing!
This is great, thank you! I’ve been trying to figure out how to keep an edge from darkening when I burnish.
As always, a great video. Thank you very much.
You're awesome! Thanks for all these sick, informative videos!
Very detailed and informational. Thanks for posting
Very informative video. Well done 👍🏾! Keep it boss 💯
Another great vid. Been obsessed with all of then
Greetings,
Thanks for this video.
Got answers to a number of "doubts"-"grey areas".
The instruction, is precise, absolutely clear and even delightful.
Looking forward to more videos from CORTER LEATHER.THANKS.
Excellent. Must bookmark it.
You're a very clear and calm teacher, you stay on task, (but throw in useful points), have a pleasant voice, work at a nice pace
. Glad to have discovered your channel and business. Cherry on the cake is when you mentioned you are also open to learning. Happy to be another follower and to learn from your experience.
Nice clip and well described process and well filmed.
Hi, very nice video :) if you are making a belt but you want it to be dyed, would you first bevel your leather strap, dye both sides and edges, then apply water, tokonole, or gum tragacanth, burnish, aplly wax and burnish again, is there a need for sanding in between any of these steps?
The demonstration you gave. I thought was well done.... thank you... Kpc from Pgh,Pa.
Thank you very much for the help! A good friend made a kilt belt for me a long time ago and the edges are starting to go a wee bit ragged so I've got my work cut out for me! This is so cool and I'm really stoked to give this a try!
Thanks very helpful to a beginner like me and the video was well done 👏
Great demo ! Thanks...Do you have any videos on sharpening " Bevelers " ?
Thank you, learned a lot from this video.
Thanks for the informative video. If time permits please make a video on how to finish edges using edge paint.
Dude thank you so much! This worked out great for me!!
That's what I was most curious about. Thank you.
I was taught that when sanding or filing ANYTHING, you always go WITH the grain and not against it. The reason my grandfather told me this was that when you go against the grain, you run the chance of tearing or stripping out pieces of the leather, wood or even metal… that is why I only sand or file with the grain and don’t go back and forth like you were doing… my grandfather was a master blacksmith, bladesmith and wood worker… he also worked with leather on a lot of his projects… he made beautiful products and I would give anything to have him here today to teach me again… he passed when I was 10 years old… I’m 50 now and still miss him every single day…
Ditto on Carl’s comment. I’ve learned so much more from these videos then any other. Can’t thank you enough. Would love to sit in a class with this guy!!
This help me so much, thank you!
Excellent explanation and demonstration, personally I made a motivated wallet with its videos, I did it recycling a leather from a weightlifting strap, I do not have the right tools, but I did, thanks for its videos and very nice work, greetings from Panama
I'd love to see a video on how your techniques change when working with exotics, specifically alligator (but anything, really).
Very Informative video.. thanks 👍
Thanks for this!
so hepful! Thank you!
Thanks master ! Good luck !
I know loads of people would have submitted this but...I asked for this so it feels YOU DID THIS VIDEO JUST FOR ME!! lol
Cracking video again though!
Thank You so much! Very informative 😊 G
Thank you so much!
Thank you very much!!
Great "how to " video #Corter Leather , all the tips a starting hobby crafter like me can use, a Big thank you :-)
Nice video, thank you so much!
Excellent video. Would LOVE to see an equivalent one for Chrome-Tanned leather.
Well done!
To sand on one direction it's because one don't want to sand up the grain. It's important to make sure that if you use double leather as in the video you need to have bought pieces with the grain pointing at the same side.
Thank you
I love how you said “I’d start with a wooden sticker but I generally always finish it with cannabis “
I have 3 edge bevelers. 0, 1 and 2. Even on my ten oz thick belts I find #2 is as big as I want. #2 gives me a nice round edge on my belts. Also note that I use a round beveler on my #1 and #2, not a flat beveler. My #0 makes a flat cut instead of a round cut.
I have a 1x42 belt sander I use to sand leather, I have found dampening the edges a little bit helps greatly to cut down on airborne leather dust.
Great video. One question. Do you dye first then burnish, or do you sand, burnish then dye??
Nice tutorial on burnishing, Thank you. Keep up the great job.
Great video thanks !!
This was great man I really struggle to get a good edge do you have a tip to know which way the grain goes I have noticed one way is good the other is fuzzy is there a rule of thumb on which way to sand? I have seen guys like toy go back and forward with heavier grit paper but then one way only with the finer grit .
I am doing a seat for a chair and the leather is dyed. So would you dye the cut edge before you burnish. I am thinking I should but wanted to double check. I am so happy i found your channel
Brilliant video, not many as detailed as this. What about how you finish dyed leather? That's A Current problem I have.
"it sands quite easily it's not like wood"
Me, a metal worker: 👁️👄👁️
nice. thanks. Back in Junior High leather Shoppe class (1969/1070 school year) all our projects were laced, so far as I recall.
I'm making a leather sheath for my Toferner "Celtic"/"Norse"/"Viking" (non-folding) pocket knife.
(OAL: 85mm). I'm saddle stitching all the seams.
I don't recall the instructor mentioning burnishing the edges.
I didn't know if burnishing was done wet or dry.
In all the leather work vids I've watched, theperson adds leather dye to the edge, then burnishes. I'm not doing any dyes.
(leather square I have was pre-dyed a dark brown, so I didn't order any dye.)
Do you have a vid on wet molding the inside of a box or tray?Wet molding was something else we didn't do in that class.
We made a couple wallets and some key fobs for self and the family. That was it.
(everything I made is long gone, so far as I know.)
I noticed going back and fourth would sand unevenly, meaning the sand paper would pass over more time in the center rather than on the edges.
Really big fan of your videos. Is there anything you do to treat the flesh side of the leather? Say the inside of a pouch or small bag?
Thank you very much..! 🙏🏻
Great vid. Question: what if you are dyeing the leather. Sand edges - then dye? Also, I read that using beeswax or gum traganth on the edge will prevent touching up the edges with dye in the future because it won't absorb? Help!
You do a absolutely amazing job, I will love to put some links from Amazon with materials what a beginner should buy and to be also at a good quality (leather, tols, etc...) thank you very much
Que ideal sería poder estar subtitulada al español este video.Saludos desde chile me encanta este canal:
Thanks for another informative video. Have a good one.
I'm Paulo btw. Thanks again.
Hi, thanks for your informative video, I have one question to you, can I use boot polish cream or liquid shoe polish or leather cream as a substitute of dye? Thanks…
This guy is awesome!!!
Great video. I tend to use Tokonole but my one issue is that I tend to overlap the face of the leather and this leaves it dull looking. Maybe I’m using too much Tokonole on the edge - I use my finger tip to apply then smooth, bit still I overlap. Any suggestions to stop the overlap and or clean the face if I do? Thanks.
👏👏 Very nice explanation and work. For the edges, the two abrasive papers which grain size do you use? Thank you....Enzo
thanks for the shar, what kind of cloth ??
This kind the burnish is for all the types of leathers? synthetic leathers also?
Does it make a difference after using tokonole followed by beeswax?
I've found that sanding in both directions can cause the grain to raise up and get fuzzy, but I guess it doesn't really matter to me because I use Tokonole for burnishing and it keeps it all slicked down anyway. Keep up the great work guys! I love your ASM and narrated videos!
Hello vikingkong! Did seiwa tokonole good for burnishing edge on chrome tann?
@@mosesnjorosh9717 Chrome tan doesn't burnish as well as veg tan, but I've had some luck with it. I think it depends on the quality of the chrome tan leather.
Thanks for sharing
What kind of box/caddy do you store your tools in?
Can you burnish a chrome tanned cowhide leather?
Do you use the same steps with thinner leather say 3 4 ounce ?
Can you show the one needle stitch you always use please?
Sometimes I wonder what if I go out of order or if there is an order when beveling, burnishing, gluing, and stitching.
Hello! Could you suggest or advise me some books about the history of the appearance of leather belts? And also books on how to make belts according to English canons and rules?)