Thought I'd document some of the progress/failures/challenges in one thread in case it's helpful for anyone else, plus I always get useful advice from the BCUK Megabrain.
Thank you to Broch for so kindly donating me my first piece of leather and some needles with which to (hopefully) sew it all together.
Step one - Drawing up the pattern
I drew this up on some standard crafting card. I found it helpful to Blu Tack the handle of the knife and a (thicker) blob on the end of the blade as well, stopped it sliding around as I drew the outline. The thicker bit at the blade-end is to stop the knief 'see-sawing' as I adjusted pressure on it, as this messed with the angle of the pencil as I was drawing.
I measured approx 0.5 inches from the centre of the card and then rested the spine of the handle/blade close up against that, leaving enough room at the bottom of the card for the welt and at the top of the card for the belt loop.
First draft was this:

Here I made the mistake of following the drawing of the welt up the spine of the blade rather than terminating it at the central fold. Still, this was accurate enough to know roughly what sized piece of leather I'd need.
I ended up redrawing this about 5 or 6 times. Each time I'd get as far as cutting it out of card and realise I needed to adjust. I surpressed the temptation to just go "Ah, sod it" and try to correct it on the leather. Measure twice, cut once. Or in this case, measure 5 or 6 times and cut once. I'm glad that Past Me made the sensible choice.
One of the additions I made to the pattern was tracing a line approx 1mm around the edge of the blade to give enough space for the blade and the welt in the sheath.

Once I was happy with the pattern, I folded the card in half and Stanley Knifed that sucker out. It's worth at this point keeping in mind which side of the sheath the belt loop needs to be on once the sheath has been folded with the rough side facing inwards.
Step 2 - Cutting the leather
My new best chum Blu Tack came back into the mix here, just a few tiny dots to hold the card steady on the leather as I drew around it. I know some people use a scratch awl, or poke little holes around with a scratch awl, but I went for a ballpoint pen. Did the trick nicely - pencil wasn't the right tool for this.
Important note: Make sure you have enough leather in your offcuts to cut out the welt! Don't chop it all into tiny pieces.
I used a rotary cutter to get the rough cut done, then a stanley knife to do the finer edges. Same gig for the welt as for the main sheath.
As of 27/10/2025 at 1337hrs, that is where I currently am.

My next job is (I think) to oil the leather, leave that for a bit and then stain the leather.
Project #1 - Skrama 80 knife sheath
Thank you to Broch for so kindly donating me my first piece of leather and some needles with which to (hopefully) sew it all together.
Step one - Drawing up the pattern
I drew this up on some standard crafting card. I found it helpful to Blu Tack the handle of the knife and a (thicker) blob on the end of the blade as well, stopped it sliding around as I drew the outline. The thicker bit at the blade-end is to stop the knief 'see-sawing' as I adjusted pressure on it, as this messed with the angle of the pencil as I was drawing.
I measured approx 0.5 inches from the centre of the card and then rested the spine of the handle/blade close up against that, leaving enough room at the bottom of the card for the welt and at the top of the card for the belt loop.
First draft was this:

Here I made the mistake of following the drawing of the welt up the spine of the blade rather than terminating it at the central fold. Still, this was accurate enough to know roughly what sized piece of leather I'd need.
I ended up redrawing this about 5 or 6 times. Each time I'd get as far as cutting it out of card and realise I needed to adjust. I surpressed the temptation to just go "Ah, sod it" and try to correct it on the leather. Measure twice, cut once. Or in this case, measure 5 or 6 times and cut once. I'm glad that Past Me made the sensible choice.
One of the additions I made to the pattern was tracing a line approx 1mm around the edge of the blade to give enough space for the blade and the welt in the sheath.

Once I was happy with the pattern, I folded the card in half and Stanley Knifed that sucker out. It's worth at this point keeping in mind which side of the sheath the belt loop needs to be on once the sheath has been folded with the rough side facing inwards.
Step 2 - Cutting the leather
My new best chum Blu Tack came back into the mix here, just a few tiny dots to hold the card steady on the leather as I drew around it. I know some people use a scratch awl, or poke little holes around with a scratch awl, but I went for a ballpoint pen. Did the trick nicely - pencil wasn't the right tool for this.
Important note: Make sure you have enough leather in your offcuts to cut out the welt! Don't chop it all into tiny pieces.
I used a rotary cutter to get the rough cut done, then a stanley knife to do the finer edges. Same gig for the welt as for the main sheath.
As of 27/10/2025 at 1337hrs, that is where I currently am.

My next job is (I think) to oil the leather, leave that for a bit and then stain the leather.
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