Thursday, March 27, 2014

DIY: Halter Repair

True blogger confession: I love all those crafty, creative do-it-yourself projects on Pinterest and such.... but I just do not have an artistic eye. Or any style-sense whatsoever, actually. 

Plus I tend to cut corners when it comes to buying all the tools and materials or whatnot (what can I say? I'm cheap), so projects turn out harder and more frustrating than they really should be...

So. With that said. You can imagine my extreme pride and sense of personal accomplishment to present...


That's right, yours truly was able to do some basic leatherwork and thus extend the usable life of a halter. It's a big day.

So the halter broke at the show at 2 places: where a cheek-piece attaches to the nose band, and at one of the crown-piece buckles.  Apparently this latter piece is where most halters break because you can find replacement "breakaway" pieces online for ~ $4. 

But the cheek-piece? I couldn't find any type of replacement online or in the tack store. The tack store quoted me at $20 to $30 for halter repair, which sounded steep to me. Online tack repair was cheaper...but not once you factored in shipping. 

So I decided I would just do it myself. At the end of the day it cost me $16 for all the supplies, with lots and lots of leftovers for future leatherwork projects:
  • 1 Leather hole punch ($8, though I could have looked for one at the barn).
  • Chicago screws (I bought 2 bags of different sizes, each for $4).
  • Old stirrup leather.
  • Heavy duty scissor (I used an old cooking shear).

Old stirrups...not just for jump straps anymore!
Directions are pretty basic:
  • Clean, condition, and cut leather.
  • Punch the holes.
  • Use Chicago screws to secure the leather together.
The cheek-piece was very straightforward:

Repaired cheek piece

Basically, I took a short piece of leather and wrapped around the cheek-piece, through the noseband ring, and secured it back onto the cheek-piece from both sides using the screw.

The breakaway/buckle piece was slightly more challenging:

Fully functional buckle piece

Broken buckle piece

Replacement buckle piece from old stirrup leather!

An 8" long piece of leather is bent into an S shape, with one end looping around the halter's side O-ring, and the other end attached to the buckle, then bent into a full 8 shape and secured with one Chicago screw. On the right hand side of this picture, you can see I used the hole-puncher to make a gap in the middle of the leather. The buckle's tongue sticks through here so it can move open and closed.

Ready for action!




Full disclosure: following the show I immediately went to the tack store and purchased a new leather halter for everyday use. This repaired halter is now my back-up halter. Which you can bet I'll be bringing to every.single.show.or.outing. from now on. 


12 comments:

  1. Come fix my halter, I am too lazy!

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    Replies
    1. Email me a photo of where it's broken and I can let you know if I think I can fix it (zero guarantee of my leather matching though, lol). And if you pay the shipping costs, I'll fix it for free.

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    2. SarahERune -at- gmail -dot- com

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  2. creative and awesome! (fix mine too plz)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Same deal as L - send me a photo and I'll let you know if I think I can. =)

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  3. go girl! I am not a fixer at all lol

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Me neither until now. I was just too darn cheap to throw it away or pay for overpriced repair! Lol

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  4. Wow, talk about getting your monies worth! Nicely done too.

    ReplyDelete