TVvoodoo
Ambassador of The Comfortably Slung
Documenting the making of a custom Class Act/Prophecy hybrid for a forum brother who has been very patient with me!
First off he knew he wanted a certain length (with adjustment), 3" wide, padded in black smooth grain leather, back buckler, with a slight reptile theme, but staying in black/gray/chrome colour theme
First off... Pick a buckle, any buckle
Then, with a gothic cross feature on the front, he wanted it in a reptile theme, so I presented him with choices I had here in the shop.
Some were leather, some where vinyl. Doesn't really matter for such a small element, really.
See which bits we chose? He also wanted to see the leather before I started assembly, thankfully he approved this pic I had already cut it - this is a black upholstery leather, not as thin as garment stuff, really nice to work with. The tail strap is sturdy veg-tan which I still need to dye a matching black, nose end also made of the same sturdy stuff
The body is now formed, and I set to putting the back buckle assembly to the main body. Both sewed and rivets for security.
Oh and glued too LOL! Not going anywhere soon.
Also laid in the cross element on the frontside, with a few prong studs, and the celtic flavoured concho of his choice.
Prior to main assembly, I have to get all the main body bits together on the top of the strap so I can pad it out and line it afterwards. This pattern a combo of mushroom-headed pronged spots in the middle and four quick rivets surrounding. I don't know how many, approx 35 all told I think
A straplock fella, he wanted me to punch the proper sized holes, and press into the vegtan on the nose and tail like another craftsman does, I was game to try with an old spare lock set I have taken out of service (not a fan), and some creative spacer-ing. 2 tons of squeeze baby!
While this is good 3.6 mm thick vegtan (9 oz), this punches it maybe 3/4 of a MM down There will be plenty of threads left to attach locks I think, and no compromise in strength.
Then we get to sewing! Note the rolled-over edges, not just chop offs like so many others feel is good enough. Also, while I many not be running giveaways of free bonus straps, or two for one whatevers, you can be sure the Well-Hung strap you get was measured PIN-to-PIN, and will be LONG enough for you, and not having to sit on a sketchy last adjustment loop. This one floats between 49-59 easy. The customer needs 55" so kinda right in the middle.
He also asked I shore up the keeper bit on the back end which holds the tail strap down, as he wants to hang his wireless off it. Not a problem! Only thing is it'll conceal the Well-Hung logo, which could work to his advantage
. Very sturdy, very comfy and a little bit sexy. What more do you need?
Also because parts of it are dyed, gotta to let that dye set, and lock it down with a few coats of clear so it don't rub off. This takes a day or two.
Crazy thing... My Consew got thrown out of time during stitching but thankfully not while I was sewing the contrasting stitch along the main body, which would have been a nightmare. Had to spend a couple hours taking apart and adjusting my machine yesterday before I could finish. It's been maybe eight months since it has acted up, so I've been pretty lucky! So glad I learned how to do tweaks on it... hauling it to the city and paying for a tech to fix it would put a major hurt on what I do, besides, it weighs like a hundred pounds LOL!
Watch for new in the Reverb store later today... Autumn Python... probably the last one for "PythonTober" - this is hand-dyed by me, which is kind of cool, if you like the special stuff.

First off he knew he wanted a certain length (with adjustment), 3" wide, padded in black smooth grain leather, back buckler, with a slight reptile theme, but staying in black/gray/chrome colour theme
First off... Pick a buckle, any buckle
Then, with a gothic cross feature on the front, he wanted it in a reptile theme, so I presented him with choices I had here in the shop.
Some were leather, some where vinyl. Doesn't really matter for such a small element, really.
See which bits we chose? He also wanted to see the leather before I started assembly, thankfully he approved this pic I had already cut it - this is a black upholstery leather, not as thin as garment stuff, really nice to work with. The tail strap is sturdy veg-tan which I still need to dye a matching black, nose end also made of the same sturdy stuff
The body is now formed, and I set to putting the back buckle assembly to the main body. Both sewed and rivets for security.
Oh and glued too LOL! Not going anywhere soon.
Also laid in the cross element on the frontside, with a few prong studs, and the celtic flavoured concho of his choice.
Prior to main assembly, I have to get all the main body bits together on the top of the strap so I can pad it out and line it afterwards. This pattern a combo of mushroom-headed pronged spots in the middle and four quick rivets surrounding. I don't know how many, approx 35 all told I think
A straplock fella, he wanted me to punch the proper sized holes, and press into the vegtan on the nose and tail like another craftsman does, I was game to try with an old spare lock set I have taken out of service (not a fan), and some creative spacer-ing. 2 tons of squeeze baby!
While this is good 3.6 mm thick vegtan (9 oz), this punches it maybe 3/4 of a MM down There will be plenty of threads left to attach locks I think, and no compromise in strength.
Then we get to sewing! Note the rolled-over edges, not just chop offs like so many others feel is good enough. Also, while I many not be running giveaways of free bonus straps, or two for one whatevers, you can be sure the Well-Hung strap you get was measured PIN-to-PIN, and will be LONG enough for you, and not having to sit on a sketchy last adjustment loop. This one floats between 49-59 easy. The customer needs 55" so kinda right in the middle.
He also asked I shore up the keeper bit on the back end which holds the tail strap down, as he wants to hang his wireless off it. Not a problem! Only thing is it'll conceal the Well-Hung logo, which could work to his advantage
Also because parts of it are dyed, gotta to let that dye set, and lock it down with a few coats of clear so it don't rub off. This takes a day or two.
Crazy thing... My Consew got thrown out of time during stitching but thankfully not while I was sewing the contrasting stitch along the main body, which would have been a nightmare. Had to spend a couple hours taking apart and adjusting my machine yesterday before I could finish. It's been maybe eight months since it has acted up, so I've been pretty lucky! So glad I learned how to do tweaks on it... hauling it to the city and paying for a tech to fix it would put a major hurt on what I do, besides, it weighs like a hundred pounds LOL!
Watch for new in the Reverb store later today... Autumn Python... probably the last one for "PythonTober" - this is hand-dyed by me, which is kind of cool, if you like the special stuff.

