- Joined
- May 6, 2014
- Messages
- 17,433
- Reaction score
- 16,436
Good questions.Great post! Thank you! Had no idea sewing machines were that late.
Here is another question since we are on the subject…would a Professionally made bag have the appearance of being much closer to a machine made bag just because of the nature of a pros work? Even spacing of holes etc?
Trying to picture in my minds eye the difference between Home made (which back then was Way better than our version of home made because of their average skill level) and Shop made. Was the difference not in the quality of the work but in the standardization of design and materials?
I am not a professionally trained leatherworker and had to learn many of the things in my early years by mistakes or happy circumstances (as when I first learned to do proper saddle stitching) or things I sort of dreamed up along the way. This until I found mentors who greatly helped me.
In the early 1980's, I visited the Cordwainer's Shop at Colonial Williamsburg primarily to learn how to make what is called a "butt stitch" to make sword and bayonet scabbards, as I could not figure out how to do it myself. BTW, a Cordwainer was not just a "shoe maker," but rather a highly skilled tradesman whose work went into true artistry on perfectly fitting shoes/boots to their customers. They took or made roughed out wooden "lasts" and after carefully measuring a customer's foot, carved or added things to the last so by sewing the leather around them, it matched the shoes to the customer's feet and even each individual foot when needed. They would then mark and save the last that fit the customer, to make him/her more shoes/boots in the future.
One Lady Volunteer at CW had been forced to wear orthopedic shoes for most of her life, but after the Cordwainer made her pair of shoes, she declared they fit her feet better and were far better for her feet than any orthopedic shoe she ever had. BTW, both in the period and still today, one does NOT refer to a Cordwainer as a "Cobbler" because Cobblers were never trained in the art form of truly fitting shoes and basically just repaired shoes that Cordwainers make. Now, Cobblers in the period did make plain shoes, country shoes and slave shoes; but the fit and finish was nowhere near the quality of the Cordwainer's Art.
Remember the Leather factory that made shoes and boots I mentioned in Norfolk, VA in 1747? The Master of the shop MAY have been a true Cordwainer and may not have been, we just don't know. With the shoes and boots they made, you sort of fit your feet to what they had, rather than having a set of shoes made as well as possible to fit your feet. (Pretty much the way we still do it today when most of us buy modern shoes.) They no doubt used cut out wood patterns for each piece of leather to construct the size of shoe/boot and cut the leather to those sizes and sewed them up. However, they still used good saddle stitching techniques to sew the leather and other finishing techniques.
So they had the technology and techniques to have set up such a factory system for Shot Pouches/Bags, but there weren't enough folks who could pay enough to have made it worthwhile. Therefore most professionally made Shot Pouches/Bags were what they called "Bespoke Work" or what we might call custom order, even if the bag was very plain.
The Cordwainer I referred to earlier informed me that once they came out with machine stitching, one of the "selling points" was the stitching "looked as neat and even, as though it had been made by a Master Leather worker." However, machine stitching is far inferior to hand saddle stitching when the article is put to hard use. I learned this as a Police Reservist in the late 1970's.
Back then, most cops were using leather gun belts/holsters that were machine stitched. I was one of the very few Reservists who the real Cops actually wanted to ride with them and back them up. One Cop who became a very good friend got out of the cruiser one time and I noticed the pieces of the back of his gun belt slid apart. That sure surprised me. When sliding in and out of the seats, it abraded the machine stitching and once a machine stitch breaks, a whole line of stitches can and will come apart. With hand done saddle stitching, one can break one out of three stitches and the stitching will still hold it together. I asked him why he never got it fixed and he told me there was no cobbler or shoe repairer or anyone to do it anywhere around the city or county he knew of. I saddle stitched it back together for him. Matter of fact, I wound up repairing more than a half dozen such gun belts for other real Cops on the force, once the word got around.
More coming, but I have to give my arthritic fingers a rest from typing.
Gus