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I can think of no better way to prepare for Christmas than with handmade leather stockings! I had so much fun with these! We went with a 2-3 oz. upholstery leather with a shearling top for our kits, but you can use the leather of your choice and create your own using the free downloadable pattern. Just make sure to stay within 2-4 oz. leather for the body of the stocking. Otherwise, it will get pretty tough to turn the stocking right side out. These stockings make great gifts that will last a lifetime!
Step 1: Mark and cut out the leather stocking and tab*
Print out the free downloadable pattern or use an old stocking as a pattern.
I used a scratch awl to mark the pattern onto my leather. If a scratch awl does not work on your leather, you can use a pen or marker. I was able to use leather scissors to cut out all the patterns, but use whatever you are comfortable with.
* Important note – You’ll have to mark one side of the stocking and then flip the pattern over to mark the other side. Otherwise, you’ll have one side grain out and one side flesh out when you go to sew.
Step 2: Mark and cut out the stocking cuff
I used scissors to cut the shearling also but if you’re cutting hair-on-hide or a heavier leather you may need to use a knife.
Step 3 : Stitch together your stocking main body
If you are using a sewing machine, go ahead and sew the stocking together.
If you’re hand stitching, use a stitching chisel (I used 5 mm on the whole stocking), punch your stitch holes, and then sew the stocking together using a saddle stitch, leaving about a 1/8” margin. You can do the stitching in sections or, if you’re impatient like me, use a very long piece of thread J You’ll need three times the length of the area you are stitching. If you have questions on how a saddle stitch looks, check out this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QPHJJcOrRCc starting at 9:26.
Take the cuff of your stocking and fold it in half so the shearling is facing in. Sew the two short sides together leaving a ½” seam. If hand sewing, mark a ½” stitching line, punch with the stitching chisel, and sew with a saddle stitch.
After stitching, I used a scissor and trimmed the shearling around the top of the seam so it’s easier to see the stitch holes when we get to the next step.
Step 5: This step is for hand stitching only. Punch your stitching holes along the top of the stocking, the shearling, and the tab
Step 6: Sew the cuff and tab to your stocking
This is going to be the trickiest part of sewing the stocking together. Leave the stocking inside out and wrap the cuff around the top of the stocking (shearling facing in). Make sure the seam of the shearling is at the back seam of the stocking. Fold the stocking tab in half and sandwich between the cuff and the stocking, grain side out. I put my tab right at the seam but if you want the tab a little more towards the back, go for it. If you feel more comfortable gluing the pieces together before stitching, you certainly can. Start sewing at the seam where your tab is layered in and sew all the way around the stocking. If there is extra shearling, just sew a small tuck in as you finish the last stitches. You won’t be able to see this once the stocking is turned right side out.
If you’re hand stitching, getting the needle through all three layers can be a little bit frustrating but there’s only about three stitches for the tab and once you get past that it’s a breeze. I used a saddle stich on all parts so the thread wouldn’t peek through when I turned it right side out.
I had a little bit of extra shearling when I came back around to my starting point, so I just sewed a tuck in and when I turned the stocking out it was not noticeable.
Step 7: Turn your stocking right side out
Start by folding down the top of the stocking once and then push up the toe and heel part of the stocking. Once the stocking is right side out, fold down the cuff and you’re all done. The stocking is complete!
Below are some other stockings I made with a ¾ oz. chap leather main body and a hair-on-hide cuff. I also made a few mini stockings with the same leather. The possibilities are endless. I think a 2-3 oz. natural leather with hair-on-hide cuff would be beautiful too. The leather would patina and you would get a darker color as the years go by.
Stocking Kit (includes pre-cut stocking main body, cuff and tab, Ritza Tiger Thread and 2 Needles)
If you are making the stocking with your own leather you will also need:
I think there needs to be a video for this – he does such a great job – we are missing so much – the directions are minimum at best for us beginners.
Please make a step by step video of this. Since the christmas season is close I would love to make one!
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Our entire process is focused on the production of baseball bat billets. Every step in the process, from timber selection and log procurement, log breakdown, splitting, drying and grading are all done with a singular purpose: produce the highest quality bat blanks available.
It all starts here. Selecting the best bat blank is more than just appearance. The structural integrity of the wood is critical to the performance and safety of your wood bat. Leatherstocking Hand-Split Billet Co. has combined superior hand-split and vacuum-kiln dried craftsmanship with procurement and grading expertise to deliver the highest quality wooden bat billets in the World.
We hand-split each log to follow the wood’s natural grain, ensuring straight tangential grain, strengthening the bat and almost entirely removing the chance of a tangential slope of grain failure, in all grades.
We have been harvesting, processing and brokering logs for export and domestic use since 1994. From timber selection to product processing, we have worked through the years to master the craft of hand-splitting wood while streamlining our operations to be able to provide the highest quality bat blanks on the market.
Our entire process is focused on the production of baseball bat billets. Every step in the process, from timber selection and log procurement, log breakdown, splitting, drying and grading are all done with a singular purpose: produce the highest quality bat blanks available.
It all starts here. Selecting the best bat blank is more than just appearance. The structural integrity of the wood is critical to the performance and safety of your wood bat. Leatherstocking Hand-Split Billet Co. has combined superior hand-split and vacuum-kiln dried craftsmanship with procurement and grading expertise to deliver the highest quality wooden bat billets in the World.
Leatherstocking Hand-Split Billet Co. produces hand-split and vacuum-kiln-dried billets, providing baseball bat manufacturers with the most consistently straight-grained, high-yielding, and brightest bat blanks made of maple, birch, and ash, hand-selected from within a 300 mile radius of the Leatherstocking Region of New York State.
Leatherstocking Hand-Split Billet Co. is a wholesale sup- plier of superior wooden baseball bat billets. We deliver the highest quality in both appearance and structural integrity. Our entire process is focused on the production of baseball bat billets. Every step in the process, from timber selection and log procurement, log breakdown, splitting, drying and grading are all done with a singular purpose: produce the highest quality bat blanks available.
Learn more about Leatherstocking Hand-Splits to understand why our billets are the most desired wooden bat blanks in the industry.
Baseball teams select straight-grained bats that translate to higher safety standards. Baseball bat manufacturers seek consistently straight-grained and bright-colored billets made from quality timber with higher yields from knowledgeable suppliers. Leatherstocking Hand-Split Billet Co., has integrated superior hand-split and vacuum-kiln-dried craftsmanship with procurement and grading expertise to meet the needs of baseball bat manufacturers and players alike.
Leatherstocking Hand-Split Billet Co 359 Delaware County Highway 11 Oneonta, NY 13820
Copyright© 2014. Leatherstocking Timber Products Inc.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1823–1841 series of five books by James Fenimore Cooper
For the 1924 serial film, see Leatherstocking (serial) .

^ Franklin, Wayne, James Fenimore Cooper: the Early Years ; Yale University Press; New Haven, Connecticut: 2007. 752 p. 03001080528

^ Franklin, Wayne, James Fenimore Cooper: the Later Years ; Yale University Press; New Haven, Connecticut: 2017. 840 p. 030013571

^ Cooper, James Fenimore; The Prairie: A Tale ; Easton Press; Limited edition; Norwalk, Connecticut: 1968.

^ Cooper, James Fenimore; The Pathfinder: Or The Inland Sea ; Penguin Classics; London: 1989. 512 p. ISBN 0140390715

^ Cooper, James Fenimore; The Prairie: A Tale ; Easton Press; Limited edition; Norwalk, Connecticut: 1968.

^ Cooper, James Fenimore; The Deerslayer: The First War Path ; Wordsworth Classics; Hertfordshire, England: 1998. 423 p. ISBN 1853265527

^ Cooper, James Fenimore; The Last of the Mohicans: A Tale of 1757 ; Bantam Classics; New York: 1982. 432 p. ISBN 012000030X

^ Cooper, James Fenimore; The Deerslayer: The First War Path ; Wordsworth Classics; Hertfordshire, England: 1998. 423 p. ISBN 1853265527

^ Franklin, Wayne, James Fenimore Cooper: the Early Years ; Yale University Press; New Haven, Connecticut: 2007. 752 p. 0300108052

^ Franklin, Wayne, James Fenimore Cooper: the Later Years ; Yale University Press; New Haven, Connecticut: 2017. 840 p. 0300135718

^ Cooper, James Fenimore; The Prairie: A Tale ; Easton Press; Limited edition; Norwalk, Connecticut: 1968.

^ Franklin, Wayne, James Fenimore Cooper: the Later Years ; Yale University Press; New Haven, Connecticut: 2017. 840 p. 0300135718

^ Taylor, Alan . William Cooper's Town .

^ Lukacs 69-72

^ Cooper, James Fenimore; The Deerslayer: The First War Path ; Wordsworth Classics; Hertfordshire, England: 1998. 423 p. ISBN 1853265527

^ Cooper, James Fenimore; The Deerslayer: The First War Path ; Wordsworth Classics; Hertfordshire, England: 1998. 423 p. ISBN 1853265527

^ Cooper, James Fenimore; The Last of the Mohicans: A Tale of 1757 ; Bantam Classics; New York: 1982. 432 p. ISBN 012000030X

^ Cooper, James Fenimore; The Pathfinder: Or The Inland Sea ; Penguin Classics; London: 1989. 512 p. ISBN 0140390715

^ Cooper, James Fenimore; The Pioneers: The Sources of the Susquehanna; A Descriptive Tale ; Penguin Classics; London: 1988. 460 p. ISBN 0140390073

^ Cooper, James Fenimore; The Prairie: A Tale ; Easton Press; Limited edition; Norwalk, Connecticut: 1968.

^ James Fenimore Cooper Society's online plot summaries of the chronologically first ( The Deerslayer )

^ The Prairie novels, indicating the initial and final years of the Leatherstocking saga

^ The Pioneers

^ "Uncas will be the last pure-blooded Mohican because there are no pure-blooded Mohican women for him to marry." University of Houston study guide

^ Chief Uncas

^ "Silent Era : Progressive Silent Film List" .


Wikimedia Commons has media related to Leatherstocking Tales .
The Leatherstocking Tales is a series of five novels by American writer James Fenimore Cooper , set in the eighteenth-century era of development in the primarily former Iroquois areas in central New York. [1] [2] Each novel features Natty Bumppo , a frontiersman known to European-American settlers as "Leatherstocking", [3] "The Pathfinder", [4] and "the trapper". [5] Native Americans call him "Deerslayer", [6] " La Longue Carabine " ("Long Rifle" in French), [7] and "Hawkeye". [8]

The story dates are derived from dates given in the tales and span the period roughly of 1740–1806. They do not necessarily correspond with the actual dates of the historical events described in the series, which discrepancies Cooper likely introduced for the sake of convenience. For instance, Cooper manipulated time to avoid making Leatherstocking 100 years old when he traveled to the Kansas plains in The Prairie . [11] [12]

The Natty Bumppo character is generally believed to be inspired, at least in part, by the historic explorer Daniel Boone or the lesser known David Shipman. [13] [ page needed ] Critic Georg Lukacs likened Bumppo to Sir Walter Scott 's "middling characters; because they do not represent the extremes of society, these figures can serve as tools for the social and cultural exploration of historical events, without directly portraying the history itself. [14]

Several films have been adapted from one or more of this series of Cooper's novels. Some used one of Bumppo's nicknames, most often Hawkeye, to identify this character, e.g., in:

Two Canadian TV series were based on the character of Leatherstocking:

WQED (TV) Pittsburgh's Once Upon A Classic children's television series produced a four-episode adaptation entitled Leatherstocking Tales (1979), which won one Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Children's Series and was nominated for another for writing. The main character's name is Natty Bumppo, though other nicknames appear.

The Sources of the Susquehanna; A Descriptive Tale


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