Spikebuck,
I made my first Shooting Pouch in the summer of 1972 when I was L/Cpl in the Marine Corps and stationed at Camp Pendleton, CA. I had no mentor and there was almost nothing on making a period Shooting Pouch that I knew of at that time. I made mine by trying to copy ones I saw in paintings in books. I also knew almost nothing about leather working back then and was not making much money. However, I wanted to try to make a Shooting Pouch to go along with my brand new TC Hawken Rifle.
One weekend I found the Tandy Leather Store in Oceanside and went in to see about getting some leather and hopefully some book or publication that would help me. There really wasn’t any publication that dealt with that kind of leather working, so I was bound to make a number of mistakes.
They did not have any buckskin and certainly not any brain tanned buckskin. The closest thing they had was “Golden Buckskin Color” Cowhide splits. I later learned those splits ran 3 ½ to 4 oz. weight, but I didn’t know Oz. weight of leather back then. The splits seemed to have been thick enough to hold shape for a shooting pouch to my uneducated mind. I got talked into using lace to assemble the pouch and the round star punch to make the holes. Don’t get me wrong, I don’t believe they were deliberately trying to steer me wrong, but they just didn’t know any better. Many “Hippie” bags, purses and pouches were being made like that in those days. So back to the open squad bay in the barracks I went with my “goodies” to make the pouch.
I used newspaper to make patterns of the pieces and was relieved that G.I. issue scissors were strong enough and sharp enough to cut the cowhide split. Since I didn’t really know what I was doing, it took the rest of that weekend, some nights the next week and the next weekend to finish the pouch. Except for the lacing, it looked pretty close to the pictures in the books. (Not too long ago LaBonte mentioned some original pouches from Texas and the Southwest were made by lacing, so the pouch was more accurate than I knew for a long time.)
Anyway, I put the “stuff” in the bag I needed to shoot the TC Hawken and found even at the 3 ½ to 4 oz. thickness, it was so soft that it folded up when I tried to get anything out of or return anything to the pouch. IOW, complete failure for a shooting pouch. A few years later, it did work as a storage pouch hung from an Ozan rope in our full size Tipi Lodge, though, so I got some good out of it.
The problem with the cowhide split was the “temper” or pliability of the hide was just too soft/pliable to work for a shooting pouch. I later learned that Veg Tanned Leather in that thickness was fine for a Shooting Pouch, but that is because it has a different temper.
Gus