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Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Best Rawhide Techniques For Hobby Crafters

By Ethan O. Tanner


Rawhide dates back to the earlier Americans. Rawhide intentions include shields, drum heads, lace, lampshades, furniture, wraps up, and very much more. Rawhide constitutes firmness as it has not been tanned; it has solely been de-haired and maintained. Drench it in body of water for moulding, cutting and forming. It dries, constrains and holds its figure.

Rawhide is frequently and erroneously called leather. Rawhide has been used for many different purposes for thousands of years. Rawhide is made by scraping the skin thin, soaking it in lime, and then stretching it while it dries.

Rawhide is more inflexible and more breakable than other forms of leather, and is principally encountered in intents such as drum heads or western articles of furniture where it does not require to flex importantly. It has as well been cut into strips for utilization in lace or sewing, or for making several varieties of dog chews or bones.

Rawhide was practiced to form par fleches (envelope-like containers), moccasin soles and ropes. Rawhide is what you usually encounter with Native American drums, par fleches, and more. Rawhide constitutes an animal pelt which gets dried out through salting. Rawhide represents everything from article of clothing and personal items to construction materials, piece of furniture, and tools.

Rawhide makes up the unprocessed pelt of an animal that stays in its natural state. Various companies use rawhide to construct low-friction, high-impact, soft face hammers or mallets; this rawhide mallet is superior for tooling and stamping oak workmanship of leather.

Prepared rawhide can be purchased at some outstanding craft stores, leather distributors specifically Leather Unlimited and saddlery shops. Ready rawhide may include rawhide goatskin, rawhide pigskin, rawhide drum covers, rawhide lace, and many additional merchandises.

Making your own rawhide is much easier than tanning a hide for the novice, and quite inexpensive. Once this is done, turning a raw skin into rawhide is a fairly simple process. If you want to save it for later use, once the rawhide is dry, roll it gently and tie with a lace for storage. When you are ready to use the rawhide, soak it again in a five gallon bucket until it is soft again, usually about fifteen to twenty-four hours, depending on the thickness of the hide. If you soak a piece of rawhide, then something comes up and you aren't ready to use it when you planned, you can keep it hydrated for a few days and it won't hurt it as long as you change the water at least once a day, depending on the temperature. Rawhide is really just skin that has been dehaired, and it has many varied uses.

Opportunities to work on such crafts as drums, rawhide making, rawhide tanning, cradles, moccasins and many other fascinating primitive technologies are great craft projects. First it must be converted to "rawhide". Once tanned, the rawhide achieves the soft substance of leather that we are familiar with. Dog chew toys are a good source of rawhide if you don't need large pieces. Why do you think we call it "rawhide". Rawhide is "raw" because it has not been tanned. Most of the leather we use today is tanned leather, but rawhide is still used to make many products even though it is not technically tanned.




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