The Buckskinner article has inspired me to try a little leather work. I need an awl and needles, thread or sinew, a stitching wheel and of course leather. Is there anything else? What is an edge beveler? (Zurl's article mentions them).
I have seen an needle type thing with a spool on it for stitching. Is that a good idea to get?
You don't really need much... You can get by with a home-made awl, just epoxy a sharpened brad in a dowel. A stitching wheel is nice, but not needed if you got a good eye for spacing and sew the leather damp. Likewise the edge beveler. Nice to have for marking a constant line from the edge, but not a requirement to produce a quality job. There's also a stitching channel tool, makes a cut groove to sew in. Again- nice but not required.
What you DO need more than anything are the best needles you can find. Bad or cheap needles will make life MISERABLE. My favorite is one with a diamond shaped tip, and if you can find them- a large 2" curved surgical needle works great. Use plenty of beeswax on the thread, and repeat as needed as it wipes off while you sew.
Double-needle stitching will give a much better result than the spool gadget thingy, and it's worth it in the long run. The Wonder-Awl (I think that's what they're called) makes a lock stitch that imitates a sewing machine stitch. Works OK, but can pull out at the worst possible time and can be a royal pain in the posterior to keep
JUST the right amount to tension on the thread.
Couple of other tools that I found useful...
an old polished antler tine- gotta be smooooooooth as silk or it wont work. I use it to burnish the leather edge and flatten out the stitches. A little warmed beeswax on the tine, and lots of elbow grease and that seam will look like glass.
If you plan on doing a LOT of sewing a stitching pony is real helpful addition to the tool list. It helps keep tension on the thread, acts as a third and fourth hand holding the work, and makes stopping mid-project much easier when everything is held in place and not flopping around the workbench.
vic