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Fur skin possibles bag

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David LaPell

32 Cal
Joined
May 27, 2024
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Location
Adirondack Mountains of New York
I was at Fort William Henry today with my son and I noticed one of the guides/interpreters was wearing a fur possibles bag. I didn't get a chance to talk to him but I really like this design. I have a decent size muskrat that would work but not sure how to sew up a fur pelt compared to leather.

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I was at Fort William Henry today with my son and I noticed one of the guides/interpreters was wearing a fur possibles bag. I didn't get a chance to talk to him but I really like this design. I have a decent size muskrat that would work but not sure how to sew up a fur pelt compared to leather.

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Easy way: turn it inside out and stitch it. Then flip it right side out. You'll be stitching the skin side and not the fur side so it won't be much trouble. I haven't done one with fur but, for the leather bags I make, I'll glue it together around the edges and let the glue dry. Then use a two prong leather punch and go ahead and make the holes all the way around. Takes a few minutes but much easier than forcing the needle through for every stitch. Once it's sewed up I'll turn it out. I usually also put the strap or strap connectors on before stitching the two bag panels together though. I find that to be less agrivating.
 
I was at Fort William Henry today with my son and I noticed one of the guides/interpreters was wearing a fur possibles bag. I didn't get a chance to talk to him but I really like this design. I have a decent size muskrat that would work but not sure how to sew up a fur pelt compared to leather.

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Fur bags are cool 😎 but I've never been a fan. I keep thinking about them getting wet in the rain 🌧.

Not to be picky or adversarial, but his bag wasn't what we, at least in this century, call a possibles bag. A possibles would be more like a haversack.
 
When I made mine during the last century we called it a possible bag, now this century I still call it a possible bag. That covers two centuries. A rose by any other name would smell as sweet!
😉
Not referring to yours Phil. Was referring to the belt bag in the first post.
 
Not to start a fight but please consider that much of what you see at Fort William Henry is inappropriate. The entire physical structure is something that remains out of the 1950s and is pretty historically incorrect (blacktop anyone?). The last time I was there the Grenadier interpreter was wearing black, high-top canvas sneakers as part of his uniform. Just saying...

That's all for now. Take care and until next time...be well.

snapper
 
I have called them a possibles bag for over 50 years.
When I first got into BP back in 94 my wife bought me a TC suede bag at the local gun store. I didn't know anything then so, when it said possibles bag right there on the packaging, I assumed that's what it was. It is actually too small for a possibles bag but just right for a shooting bag for small calibers. I don't know what to call them now as some guys say rifle bag, shot bag, shot pouch, shooter's bag... So I still refer to it as a possibles bag sometimes. It's just a bit smaller than the possibles bag hanging off my other shoulder.
 
@Dixieis correct.
lots of wasy to skin a furry critter.
This is the only bag I have used for the last 6 or 7 years and it's is holding up as good as any other.
(Groundhog, buckskin, ticking cloth)
 

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In the 90s, I was the Head Guide at Fort William Henry for 6 years. Our “curator” was a retired high school art teacher who had been hired for his ability to design and build displays- I spent years doing all the research for him. I was able to fix some of the misinformation in the museum and on the tour, but there were only two things I was able to fix as far as the material culture went. One was to get them to stop issuing waistcoats with zippers up the front and gaiters that zipped up the outside of the leg. Even then, it only happened because I pointed out that missing button made a waistcoat look well-worn, but a zipper that threw a tooth required a replacement and that cost money. We had a half Comanche fella who would take tours in his Indian Wars western outfit until Last of the Mohicans came out, then he got decent Eastern Woodland clothing made- the Fort didn’t provide any clothing for anyone who wasn’t 44th Regiment British. Wore my own stuff for years because it was better. The second was convincing them to allow my anthropology professor, Dr. Maria Liston, to do an archaeological field school. As part of it, we got them to rebury the human remains they’d been displaying since the 1950s. I will always be grateful to the old place for launching my decades-long career in museums, but I will also never forget that it isn’t actually much of a museum itself.
Which is all to say, don’t take any of the material culture you see there as actually representative of the New York frontier in the 1750s. 😬
Jay
 
I was at Fort William Henry today with my son and I noticed one of the guides/interpreters was wearing a fur possibles bag. I didn't get a chance to talk to him but I really like this design. I have a decent size muskrat that would work but not sure how to sew up a fur pelt compared to leather.

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Same technique. It's just thin leather.
 

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