My friend kindly donated 2 boxes of leather scraps tae me. as a thankyou i have made this sheath for his machete and shall most likely make matching sets for his other knives. It is a quickdraw sheath made fae pre-dyed veg tan leather, hand stitched with waxed linen thread with a few brass rivets and a brass sam browne stud. also has a loop for a sharpening rod or firesteel
this is in nae way a tutorial. merely pictures of my process and some problems i faced whilst making the sheath.
I started with a basic template drawn around the blade then added an extra centimetre for welt.
By wanderingpict at 2012-01-11
cut out both sides using normal scissors. nae much precision here because it all gets sanded down neatly later
By wanderingpict at 2012-01-11
cut out and glued on a welt. kept it in place with paper clip things and washing pegs whilst glue dried. i left the firesteel loop out until later as i wasted tae smooth out the edges before i added the loop you can see here that it is the shape of the welt that really locks the blade intae the sheath
By wanderingpict at 2012-01-11
Sew on belt loop with brass d-ring
By wanderingpict at 2012-01-11
By wanderingpict at 2012-01-11
next i glued the sheath together, keeping it all in place with whatever i had closeby
By wanderingpict at 2012-01-11
Next i sanded down the edges so they were all neat and alligned. buffed them down with spit and my bone fork and SAK. i used a stitch groover around all the edges, and added the loop. i just got this tool and it has mightily improved my work for practical reasons and it looks great
By wanderingpict at 2012-01-11
Punched in my stitching holes with a stitching iron and a small screwdriver for the stitch groover found this difficult as i often had tae prop the sheath up either side of the belt loop so i had an even surface and the punch would go straight down. i used the fork and awl tae widen stitches and make sure they go all the way through. i think i need a dremel....would save so much time and effort (i made a shoddy leather sleeve tae put on my tools as i only have a metal hammer this stops me damaging my tools)
By wanderingpict at 2012-01-11
stitching kills my fingers so i use my handy SAK as a stitching palm. also find it good for buffing edges with spit.
By wanderingpict at 2012-01-11
almosy finished just adding the strap tae secure the blade. this locks the blade intae place with the shaped welt. the strap was a real pain tae add as i waited until the last minute without realising the problems for stitching! so i used a stitching awl you can see the in picture. SWMBO bought it for me and it really saved the day here as i wouldnt be able tae get a normal needle around the the stitching inside the sheath. tis a lesson tae either add the strap early on or just use rivets for it
By wanderingpict at 2012-01-11
I added the sam brown stud and ta-dah
By wanderingpict at 2012-01-12
By wanderingpict at 2012-01-12
By wanderingpict at 2012-01-11
By wanderingpict at 2012-01-11
By wanderingpict at 2012-01-11
This is the first sheath i am really happy with mainly because of the neat stitching. wish i had just bought a stitch groover and stitching iron months ago!
comments are very welcome, thanks for looking.
Hamish
this is in nae way a tutorial. merely pictures of my process and some problems i faced whilst making the sheath.
I started with a basic template drawn around the blade then added an extra centimetre for welt.

By wanderingpict at 2012-01-11
cut out both sides using normal scissors. nae much precision here because it all gets sanded down neatly later

By wanderingpict at 2012-01-11
cut out and glued on a welt. kept it in place with paper clip things and washing pegs whilst glue dried. i left the firesteel loop out until later as i wasted tae smooth out the edges before i added the loop you can see here that it is the shape of the welt that really locks the blade intae the sheath

By wanderingpict at 2012-01-11
Sew on belt loop with brass d-ring

By wanderingpict at 2012-01-11

By wanderingpict at 2012-01-11
next i glued the sheath together, keeping it all in place with whatever i had closeby


By wanderingpict at 2012-01-11
Next i sanded down the edges so they were all neat and alligned. buffed them down with spit and my bone fork and SAK. i used a stitch groover around all the edges, and added the loop. i just got this tool and it has mightily improved my work for practical reasons and it looks great

By wanderingpict at 2012-01-11
Punched in my stitching holes with a stitching iron and a small screwdriver for the stitch groover found this difficult as i often had tae prop the sheath up either side of the belt loop so i had an even surface and the punch would go straight down. i used the fork and awl tae widen stitches and make sure they go all the way through. i think i need a dremel....would save so much time and effort (i made a shoddy leather sleeve tae put on my tools as i only have a metal hammer this stops me damaging my tools)

By wanderingpict at 2012-01-11
stitching kills my fingers so i use my handy SAK as a stitching palm. also find it good for buffing edges with spit.

By wanderingpict at 2012-01-11
almosy finished just adding the strap tae secure the blade. this locks the blade intae place with the shaped welt. the strap was a real pain tae add as i waited until the last minute without realising the problems for stitching! so i used a stitching awl you can see the in picture. SWMBO bought it for me and it really saved the day here as i wouldnt be able tae get a normal needle around the the stitching inside the sheath. tis a lesson tae either add the strap early on or just use rivets for it

By wanderingpict at 2012-01-11
I added the sam brown stud and ta-dah


By wanderingpict at 2012-01-12

By wanderingpict at 2012-01-12

By wanderingpict at 2012-01-11

By wanderingpict at 2012-01-11

By wanderingpict at 2012-01-11
This is the first sheath i am really happy with mainly because of the neat stitching. wish i had just bought a stitch groover and stitching iron months ago!
comments are very welcome, thanks for looking.
Hamish
Last edited: