Samples - New Products We Are Working On
-
We are working on getting the suede. Once we manage that, all it easy (but expensive)…
There are still several tanneries in Austria making „Saemischleder“ of deer and roe hides. If you need addresses let me know.
As discussed in Gosport. These are traditional Austrian „Lederhosen“ made of deer skin like the shirt Haraki wore but black dyed in this case. Every stich is made by hand even the button holes.
-
@Chap The lederhosen and boots are absolutely stunning! Does the stitching pattern have any significance or are they general to the maker and area?
Thank you for sharing.
Cheers @goosehd yes the colour and pattern of the stitching refers to different areas. The stiching can be very time-consuming, it can take up to 120 h to make a pair. It can rise the price up to a small car for a pair. Waiting lists with the few makers are usually several years. The stiches don‘t go through the leather they run in the leather that‘s why they create a relief on the hide. A Lederhose can last for generations and are handed from father to son.
-
Nothing to say sorry about G.!
Everything what brings this Shacket to live, is the right choice!@rocket
It was a wonderful lesson in german dialect.
It took over ten attempts by phone, to speak to Mr. Kolesch in person.
But even the chat with one of their Czech seamstresses was instructive, exciting and worthwhile.
I’ve send them a photo of Haraki and the Shacket. I’m sure they’ll remember the project. -
How the current generation of UHF's came about is a nice story. We made a few way-back and they were very popular. Then H just stopped making them. After a few years hiatus, I asked him if we could start making them again. His answer was no, the man who wove the UHF had moved to a new factory. I suggested he contact the guy and see whether he could weave the same fabric at the new factory (I specialize in rocket-science). So he did contact the guy, and guess what? He could weave the same fabric at the new factory…..BOOM Without wanting to generalise, the Japanese nation sometimes really struggle to think outside the box. The guy had moved on, so it was impossible...
-
Without wanting to generalise, the Japanese nation sometimes really struggle to think outside the box. The guy had moved on, so it was impossible…
It is a fixed mindset issue, which I how found to be prevent with many of the engineers I work with, like 1+1=2. If “1” is not longer there, then there can be no “2” [emoji3166]. Math is easy to teach and learn, the rules are preset, just follow them (generally speaking, I don’t want the theoretical physicists throwing rocks at me). But it is much harder to teach adaptability, or what I call dreamability. Ok, so we want 2, but 1 no longer exists…. would it be possible to find a 4 and ask them to get rid of 3?? Maybe.... we could develop a 234 and somehow divide it by 117 [emoji2369]. Or is it possible to just create a 2 from nothing? [emoji2962]. It takes both the dreamer and the engineer to make a flying machine [emoji6]
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk