Quote Originally Posted by turpin View Post
VERY nice!. I'm always interested in alternative approaches to standard sporran construction, and the leather cantle is one of them. Want to share a ways shot with us?Is that an elk or caribou hide? Where did you source your balls?
Turpin, BeeDee, anyone else who's interested,

I am terrible about taking pictures especially when I am in the midst of trying to find my way through. This is only my third sporran.

They say a "picture is worth a thousand words." Well, maybe a couple hundred words is close. So in lieu of a photo...maybe I can tell you some things and if it's not clear you can always ask.

First the beads...I am pretty sure I got the beads at General Bead. That's where they were the cheapest by a little bit. But you can also get them at Ohio Bead. I can't vouch for them but one of my main worries was that a sterling silver bead that large would be too thin walled. The beads I got from General were quite thick. I was surprised at how thick...enough that I could grind a third of the bead away without distorting the shape of the bead.

Second the cantle...the cantle is cut from about a 9 or 10 iron insole shoulder. An outsole bend of the same thickness--slightly under 1/4 inch--would also work but be a little stiffer and harder to sew into. I sew the bag to the cantle by hand using what is known as "round closing." There is a front and a back cantle but in this case the back cantle is covered by the back of the bag. [Being black and needing to be dyed, I didn't want to take any chance that the dye would come off in my kilt. That said, for black I usually use an "iron black" which is not so fugitive or prone to rub off.]

A rabbet is cut in the where the edge of the bag will fit and about an eighth inch away a groove is made. Then the bag edge is laid into the rabbet and a hole is made with a curved awl from the groove to the rabbet and through the edge of the bag leather and then out on the surface of the bag about an eighth of an inch further in.

It requires a very thin flexible needle on each end of the thread or a pair of bristles--either nylon or the traditional boars's bristle--and they are fed from opposite directions through the hole and tightened down. When the job is done the leather lies flush with the inside surface of the cantle.

The leather for the bag is "softy buffalo" --a water buffalo tanned in India for the shoe trade--and a very nice leather, with a nice "hand," BTW.

The cantle is closed with a snap on a short strap that is round closed to the front cantle, fits in a notch at the top of the back cantle and the snap is on the back cantle.

I hope that helps...