Of course, once you start, do you ever stop distressing? Should I, shouldn't I, what do you think?



Moderator: Dalexs
It's funny, now that I look closely, the sanding on the seams just doesn't seem to show up very well in the pictures... Especially the back panel and the shoulders. Must be the lighting. But you're right, I've enjoyed distressing it so much I really didn't want to "let it go, Indiana". Back to the 320 grit!!JAN wrote:Nice job.
In my opinion You just made the bacic distressing.
Now You need to do all the seams.....
Is´nt it nice to know that You still can do some work on Your jacket![]()
Best regards
JAN
Agreed - HigHurtenflurst and Flattery did outstanding work on their jackets.Indiana_Tone wrote:![]()
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Actually, Spooky, the decison is very daunting.
The first day's arrival of a new Wested consists of marvel, amazement, admiration, and awe.
The first few steps in distressing are the timid, barely noticeable passes along the leather for testing its marking threshold.
It's this next step that forces one to commit to the distressing since there's no turning back. That first, hard, scrape! (Now, you've done it! There's no turning back after that one.) You wince, study it a little more, and realize that it doesn't look so bad - but it does look out of place with the rest of the shiny, new jacket. You must continue.
It's not so much a need to drag the thing all over the place and ruin what you can on a brand new jacket but very much an artistic approach to manually aging the thing without looking like it's been manually aged. There are mishaps that occur just in getting the feel for how the tools one uses and the jacket itself react to one another. Having tried this myself and being fairly happy with the results I've learned that it really is an artform to distress a jacket in this way without showing much flaw or man-made markings on it in the process, which is why I can express such appreciation for some of the work I've seen on these jackets. HigHurtenflurst's and Flattery's recent distressings having proven to be some terrific examples of "just right".
That would be a good decision, Xerox. Personally, I think the dark brown is more screen accurate "looking", simply because Harrisons jacket is so worn looking, that it looks dark. I have the dark brown and the authentic, I personally like the dark better. JMO.Xerox wrote:Umm... so it is a dark brown lambskin?
Looks good. I'll have to reconsider ordering a dark brown instead of an authentic lambskin wested...