Tanning Hides/skins
Posted: Sun Dec 31, 2006 11:03 am
Gidday
I hope this is good enough place to put this. I have been asked by two member about tanning or curing hides/skins and think that tips. hints is as good a place as any.
Right from when I was a boy which is far too long agao to tell, I have on occasions either tanned or cured the odd hide.
First let me distinguish the difference between the two.
Curing a skin or hide is really just like pickling it, it is presurving it in a similar state that it starts in. This is normally done with salts or with similar stuf like alum and kerosene. When it is done it is still skin or hide and can still rot the same if wet or whatever, though can be kept successfully for years.
Tanning skins or hides uses a chemical process that changes it so that it becomes leather. You can successfully home cure or tan quite easily and like most things, the end result is ususally equal to the effort put into it, but by far the best results will always be with tanning as leather, well treated will last almost for ever.
There are three basic ways to tann hides, one using sulphuric or other acid, one using chromium and the other using natural tannins, usually from bark. The acaia tree bark is noted to be the best for that.
Added to this there is the fact that you can tan with the hair/wool on or you can have it removed so you end up with very normal looking leather.
I had the hide of a cattle beast that I had killed for home use that I cured, on our lounge floor for about 10 years and that is not as good as tanning so that will give you some idea of what can be achieved by a rough country boy like me, so you should be able to do even better.
As far as I personally am concerned, my choice has always been the chromium tanny and I have bought the kit. The main reason I have stuck to the chrome tanning kits is simply because when I tried it, it worked so I didn't try either of the other methods.
I have always bought the Leidreiters Tanning kits but they have now been taken over and are called Leder Tanning Kits.
I don't know about over there but locally they can be bought from:-
http://www.outdoorsupplies.co.nz/tannin ... ts.htm#rit
So you should be able to do a bit of searching to find a closer source.
I hope this is good enough place to put this. I have been asked by two member about tanning or curing hides/skins and think that tips. hints is as good a place as any.
Right from when I was a boy which is far too long agao to tell, I have on occasions either tanned or cured the odd hide.
First let me distinguish the difference between the two.
Curing a skin or hide is really just like pickling it, it is presurving it in a similar state that it starts in. This is normally done with salts or with similar stuf like alum and kerosene. When it is done it is still skin or hide and can still rot the same if wet or whatever, though can be kept successfully for years.
Tanning skins or hides uses a chemical process that changes it so that it becomes leather. You can successfully home cure or tan quite easily and like most things, the end result is ususally equal to the effort put into it, but by far the best results will always be with tanning as leather, well treated will last almost for ever.
There are three basic ways to tann hides, one using sulphuric or other acid, one using chromium and the other using natural tannins, usually from bark. The acaia tree bark is noted to be the best for that.
Added to this there is the fact that you can tan with the hair/wool on or you can have it removed so you end up with very normal looking leather.
I had the hide of a cattle beast that I had killed for home use that I cured, on our lounge floor for about 10 years and that is not as good as tanning so that will give you some idea of what can be achieved by a rough country boy like me, so you should be able to do even better.
As far as I personally am concerned, my choice has always been the chromium tanny and I have bought the kit. The main reason I have stuck to the chrome tanning kits is simply because when I tried it, it worked so I didn't try either of the other methods.
I have always bought the Leidreiters Tanning kits but they have now been taken over and are called Leder Tanning Kits.
I don't know about over there but locally they can be bought from:-
http://www.outdoorsupplies.co.nz/tannin ... ts.htm#rit
So you should be able to do a bit of searching to find a closer source.