Studio Cleaning Day and Other Random Musings

It's been a very busy week out here.  I kept the studio going as much as I could, but after a week plus of general chaos it needed a little help.  Okay, a lot of help.

Originally, this post was going to be about patterns.  Then I kept taking pictures and writing the post in my head while I was cleaning and realized that this post wasn't really about patterns.  So now it's a cleaning and/or organizing post, but without the all-important 'before' picture and a lot of rambling.  That's okay, though...I'm sure you can construct a fairly accurate "before" image from this, this, and this,

I was going to just organize the patterns a bit and then work on commissions, but...I had to tidy up before I could do that, and things snowballed.  The patterns did get done first...

Then I organized the box that holds glue, extra tools, extra dye, anything that I don't want to walk across the room to get from the closet but isn't important enough to have a home on the top of the desk.


That didn't take a lot of effort, but it's worth mentioning just for the assortment of glues that I have collected. In reality, I only use the Eco-Flo, Super Glue Gel (blue cap just in front of Eco-Flo), and Jewelry Metal Glue.  I really like the JMG (by Aleene), but it stinks to high heavens and I wish glue manufacturers would just do away with the tubes. I can't even remember when I bought the Fast Grab Tacky Glue.

I don't have a before photo of the next area I tackled, but the plastic Dixie cups that I used to hold in progress stuff had gotten really out of hand.  In fact, by not taking a before picture, I spared you the pain of seeing it.  See? Forgetfulness isn't always a bad thing.

I had one cup crammed full of old Traditional scale strap goods that needed to be torn down for salvage. The hardware was the only thing worth keeping on most of it, but I did have some white leather stashed in there! Woohoo!


The rest of the cups were a hodge podge of unfinished projects, left over bits of leather (dyed and undyed), and who knows what.


There's an unfinished harness, a side saddle, a couple of bridles, and unfinished western saddles in that mess.  The bridles were torn down for hardware, but the saddles and harness have been stashed away just in case.Which really means that I'm procrastinating about throwing them away, because I can almost guarantee that I won't touch them until the next time I clean.



Look! My first and only rope halter resurfaced.  I had intended it for the Chips Quarter Horse, but...it didn't fit right.  The new draft horse looks pretty spiffy in it, if only I could get it to tie!


I found some sketches for western tooling patterns, too.  Someday I'll do something with them...if I remember where they've been stashed.

Oh!

Are these not the cutest little containers you've ever seen?!


The cutting mat below them is measured out in inches, to give you an idea of size.  I found mine by the dozen at Dollar Tree, in with the other plasticware.  They're "snack cups" but I have no idea what kind of snack you could stash in them.  Not a whole lot of room for that sort of thing, and they are definitely not air tight.  The lids keep me from stashing random stuff in them and make stacking a breeze.  Plus - no worries about things flying everywhere if I tip one over!

I will have a post about the patterns and some updated pictures of commissions soon, I promise! Random studio musings will have to suffice for today.


5 comments:

  1. That halter. O___O
    I struggle making them for 1/12th scale, let alone 1/32nd! :o

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  2. "Struggle" is putting it mildly! There's a reason it's the "one and only," haha! I haven't attempted it again at ANY scale. I might, eventually, but I'm not thrilled with the available materials.

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  3. Would you by chance sell the unfinished projects? I'm 13 and not 1 1/8 as good as you but O well. You are one of my favorite tack makers and I would be thrilled to own something by you, even if it was unfinished! :D

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  4. Sorry, I don't sell unfinished items. Thanks for the inquiry, though! My best advice is to practice, practice, practice! You'll get there, and you've got the benefit of the internet. You can do all kinds of research and find materials that weren't available to me when I started making tack.

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