GA Firing Line

What do you do

  • Hover

    Votes: 3 12.5%
  • Wipe and sit

    Votes: 10 41.7%
  • Birdnest

    Votes: 5 20.8%
  • eww, i'm to uppidy to use a public tiolet

    Votes: 6 25.0%

  • Total voters
    24

Axeman

If you can’t laugh at yourself you’re FUKT!!!
Kalash Klub
Lifetime Supporter
Dec 5, 2016
7,679
36,680
113
Goat Rodeo Clown
Zip code
30188
I shot my buddies grandpas series 70 and it was like shooting a Cadillac. Is that what you are referencing too? Lol
Why were you shooting a Cadillac?

Didn’t feel like taking apart the whole front bumper just to change the headlight?
 

Axeman

If you can’t laugh at yourself you’re FUKT!!!
Kalash Klub
Lifetime Supporter
Dec 5, 2016
7,679
36,680
113
Goat Rodeo Clown
Zip code
30188
Please enlighten this grasshopper...

This was cemented, punched, and hand stitched. I like the way the even stitches look on the finished work.
If you’re using a punch that looks like a fork for the long areas, then a 2-hole punch at the ends, you’re halfway there.
But instead of using that Awl, get 2 big leather needles and put the thread through the leather at the beginning of your stitches with one needle on each side of the leather.
then pass both needles in opposite directions through each of the next holes, almost like a string of figure 8s. You can back stitch at the beginning and end to make it stronger.
Much faster, and you’re not dealing with the lock stitching that keeps trying to pull out as you do the next stitch.

F66A0E27-7B22-4359-816B-829160FBBD65.jpeg
566C1748-242E-44A1-BCA1-C4EA145F7FBE.jpeg On this knife sheath I realized I had enough thread to back stitch the entire thing, so it’s double-stitched the whole way around and tripled on the ends.
 
Last edited:

T_Max

Master of the Meat
Super Moderator
Kalash Klub
Lifetime Supporter
Apr 30, 2015
8,317
41,920
113
NW GA
If you’re using a punch that looks like a fork for the long areas, then a 2-hole punch at the ends, you’re halfway there.
But instead of using that Awl, get 2 big leather needles and put the thread through the leather at the beginning of your stitches with one needle on each side of the leather.
then pass both needles in opposite directions through each of the next holes, almost like a string of figure 8s. You can back stitch at the beginning and end to make it stronger.
Much faster, and you’re not dealing with the lock stitching that keeps trying to pull out as you do the next stitch.

View attachment 105601
View attachment 105602 On this knife sheath I realized I had enough thread to back stitch the entire thing, so it’s double-stitched the whole way around and tripled on the ends.
very nice work sir