I woke up this morning with the urge to try out the instructions in a book I recently purchased, Leather Braiding by Bruce Grant. After several failed attempts at interweaving a pineapple knot, I ended up with the blue-and-brown knot in the photo below. The smaller knots are spanish ring knots. The blue knot alone took me all morning and I don't believe that I finished it correctly, so I will probably go back to practicing at larger scales before I attempt the rest of the knots on this bridle.
The piece of leather is the beginnings of a western saddle, and my first try at carving leather. I was forced to set it down before I roundhouse kicked something! My carving tool arsenal included an awl, several small screwdrivers, various sculpting tools, and a myriad of blunt metal objects I found lying around my home. Needless to say, these didn't work particularly well. I will likely be ordering real carving tools from Tandy *le gasp!*, such as the beveler recommended by Susan Bensema Young in the Guide. It's really hard to get those tiny edges around the leaves pressed down, and then to fade the impressions out nicely.
If anyone has any suggestions and hints, be they carving or knot-tying related, I would be more than happy to hear them!
I think you're being too hard on yourself. Everything looks fine. One piece of advice, perhaps you should practice knots and tooling on something that's not part of anything. If you're trying too hard to get it right, it's difficult to really relax and learn the steps.
ReplyDeleteWhich is easy for me to say, but a lot harder to do. I always want my prototypes to be perfect as well!
Thanks for the advice, I will definitely do some more practicing before I continue :)
ReplyDelete