Made My First Leather Whip - Stockwhip
Moderator: BullWhipBorton
Made My First Leather Whip - Stockwhip
This is my first leather whip. I decided I'd start with a stockwhip. It has given me the confidence to go ahead and try a bullwhip. Things I know I have to work on:
Plait tighter
Cut strands straighter
Work on dropping strands
Cut strands straighter
Work on taper
Cut strands straighter
Work on fall knot - This one is ugly as sin
Cut strands straighter
It is 7ft and seems too heavy to me, although I've never handled a stockwhip before so I'm not sure what they should feel like. I may have made the core and belly too beefy. If any of you whip makers have suggestions or critiques, feel free.
Jim
Plait tighter
Cut strands straighter
Work on dropping strands
Cut strands straighter
Work on taper
Cut strands straighter
Work on fall knot - This one is ugly as sin
Cut strands straighter
It is 7ft and seems too heavy to me, although I've never handled a stockwhip before so I'm not sure what they should feel like. I may have made the core and belly too beefy. If any of you whip makers have suggestions or critiques, feel free.
Jim
- giovanniceleste
- Vendor
- Posts: 334
- Joined: Mon Jul 18, 2005 5:46 pm
- Location: Torino (Italia)
- Contact:
-
- Archaeology Student
- Posts: 39
- Joined: Thu Jan 10, 2008 12:14 pm
I taper by hand with a box cutter and strip of leather to protect my finger. Basicially you can cut the taper into the strand when you are cutting it out of the hide and can fine tune the strands width later by hand.
xoxo
Louie
(P.S. cut your strands wider than you think they need to be, you can always make them thinner later...I'm still trying to remember to do this!)
http://www.bullwhips.org
xoxo
Louie
(P.S. cut your strands wider than you think they need to be, you can always make them thinner later...I'm still trying to remember to do this!)
http://www.bullwhips.org
Thanks Louie, I guess I just need to practice cutting and tapering.
Arthur, thanks for the kind words. I started out on para cord and the knots were a big frustration for me. Tony gave me some tips about using pins that really helped with tying the knots with nylon. I found out that tying them with leather is much easier to do because the leather doesn't slip around as much and tightens up on itself better than the para cord. Stripping the innards out of the para cord will give you enough nylon to make crackers the rest of your life
Tony's tip is in this thread: viewtopic.php?t=25139
Jim
Arthur, thanks for the kind words. I started out on para cord and the knots were a big frustration for me. Tony gave me some tips about using pins that really helped with tying the knots with nylon. I found out that tying them with leather is much easier to do because the leather doesn't slip around as much and tightens up on itself better than the para cord. Stripping the innards out of the para cord will give you enough nylon to make crackers the rest of your life
Tony's tip is in this thread: viewtopic.php?t=25139
Jim
I cut everything by hand and by eye. I started out using a cutter and it was Joe Strain who advised me to learn to cut by hand. In doing so you have a great control over how to allow for stretch in the hide and as a result end up with more uniform strands. It takes a little practice but is well worth it!