|   Introduction   
            There are many ways to leather oars. We will describe 
              one that works well for us, and requires no nails. 
            What you need: 
            
              - Leather (see below)
 
              - Container of water
 
              - Ball point pen that shows up on your leather
 
              - Exacto knife
 
              - Steel ruler
 
              - Cutting surface
 
              - Leather punch
 
              - Whipping twine
 
              - Two heavy needles (sail or canvas)
 
              - Pliers
 
             
            Leather 
            Recently we discovered the virtues of oiled and siliconed 
              boot leather for making protective coverings for boat 
              use. The leather is supple for it thickness, absorbs 
              very little water, is easy to work with, and so far 
              is wearing very well. 
            Preparation 
            First of all measure the length of the part you are 
              covering. Find a piece of leather about the right 
              length, and a bit wider than the circumference of 
              the oar loom. 
            Measuring
            Leather stretches when wet, and shrinks again when 
              it dries. Each piece I have ever met was unique - 
              sometimes even within the piece it behaves differently 
              from one place to another. I have no idea how to predict 
              how much a piece will stretch when wet. Take the sample 
              piece, wet it and wrap it around the object to be 
              covered. Mark the width needed for the leather to 
              wrap almost all the way around. Leave a gap of 1/8" 
              to 1/4". If the leather is stretchy or you are working 
              with a piece several inches wide, leave a wider gap. 
              If your object is narrow like a stanchion for example, 
              leave a smaller gap. If the leather is going to have 
              to curve in two directions, as it would when wrapping 
              a ring or boom crutch, be sure to try your sample 
              measuring piece over several inches of the object. 
              That kind of shape needs more width than a simple 
              cylinder, and you can have the edges almost butting 
              together to start with. 
            Cutting
            Using the steel ruler, cut one edge of the leather 
              on the cutting surface. Wrap it around the object 
              again, and check the marks for width. Cut the second 
              edge and check it again. If the leather wraps around 
              with the same size gap all the way, proceed to punching 
              the holes for the twine. If not, measure and cut again 
              until you have an even gap where the edges will face 
              each other. 
            Punching the holes 
            I use the smallest punch on my leather punch to make 
              holes for the twine. Mark lines of dots on the two 
              seam edges of the leather, 1/8" in from the edges 
              and 1/4" apart. Marks on the smooth side are easiest 
              to see. Do this carefully with a ruler, so you get 
              the same number of holes on both sides. Punch all 
              the holes. 
            Stitching
            Cut a piece of waxed whipping twine four times the 
              distance from your elbow to your fingertips. This 
              may not be enough to complete the whole seam, but 
              is about the maximum length to keep from tangling 
              badly or getting frayed before the end of the job. 
              Thread a sturdy needle onto each end. (Sailmaker's 
              needles or canvas needles are good.) 
            Put your leather where you want it to be, and make 
              sure it stays there until it is secured by the first 
              few stitches. 
            Start with a needle coming up through the first hole 
              on each side. (See Figure 1.) 
            
              
                  | 
                The first stitch 
                  (click images for larger views)  | 
               
             
            Take the needles across to the opposite holes, stitch 
              down into the other hole, then up again on their original 
              sides. You will have three strands next to the oar 
              and two strands on top, with a needle coming out of 
              the top of each first hole. Draw the thread up very 
              tight.  
            
              
                  | 
                "Near" 
                  needle in second holes  | 
               
             
            From here on I will refer to "near side" 
              and "far side", assuming you are holding 
              your oar across your lap or table. Take the near needle 
              across from where it came out on the near side to 
              the next hole on the far side. Go down under the seam 
              and up out of the next hole on the near side. (With 
              each stitch, your needle will start and finish on 
              the same side.) Repeat with the second needle, going 
              into the same holes but in the opposite direction. 
            
              
                  | 
                Closeup of stitch  | 
               
             
            Be careful to hold the thread to one side of the 
              punched hole, so the second needle won't pierce the 
              thread already in the hole. You should end up with 
              thread coming out of each hole on top of the seam. 
              Draw the thread up firmly with each stitch. Repeat, 
              starting from the same side each time so the threads 
              all cross in the same direction. The stitch shown 
              is almost like lacing shoes, except both threads go 
              through each hole. 
            Work along this way until you have about 12" 
              of thread left in each needle. Take a new loop of 
              thread about 6"long and fold it in half. Lay 
              the loop in the seam several holes ahead of where 
              you are.  
            
              
                  | 
                Tucking thread 
                  ends under seam  | 
               
             
            Let the tails hang out over the completed stitches, 
              and make the new stitches over the loop of thread, 
              being careful not to pierce the loop's thread with 
              your needles. When you reach the loop, draw the ends 
              of the stitching threads up tight, tie them in a square 
              knot, run the ends of the thread through the loop 
              and take the needles off.  
            
              
                  | 
                Ready to pull 
                  ends through  | 
               
             
            Grasp the ends of the loop of thread with pliers, 
              and pull hard to draw the ends of the stitching thread 
              through, under the seam and out to the front of the 
              piece.  
            Finishing off 
             If you haven't come to the end of your piece already, 
              continue on with as much thread as you need for the 
              next section, drawing stitches up tight all along, 
              working to within a few holes from the end of the 
              piece. Make another loop sticking out a bit from the 
              end of the leather, and sew up to the end. Take a 
              couple of extra stitches through the last pair of 
              holes, tie the ends in a square knot and feed the 
              ends through the loop. Finish as before, drawing the 
              loop's ends through to the front of the work, carrying 
              the stitching threads under the seam for a few stitches. 
              Trim off the ends. 
            Collars 
             As you can see, these oars have gotten pretty beat 
              up when the oar leather slips out of the oarlock and 
              bears directly on the wood. It was high time to give 
              these oars some collars. 
            I chose to use Turk's Head knots. I cut a strip of 
              leather 3/8" wide, and wrapped it around the 
              leather except for the stitching, where I left a gap. 
              I held it in place temporarily with double-sided tape. 
              The plan was to give the leather squishing room as 
              I tightened the Turk's Head. 
            
              
                  | 
                Squishing strip 
                  taped in place, with gap over the stiching  | 
               
             
            Next I set up a five-bight Turk's Head, triple-passed, 
              on my fingers, big enough to slip over the squishing 
              strip. I placed it on the oar, centered over the strip 
              of leather, and proceeded to tighten the knot. One 
              is supposed to be able to do this with a marlinspike, 
              but I had better luck with pliers. I used pretty chunky 
              nylon braid because the these particular oarlocks 
              are a lot bigger than my oars, and I needed quite 
              a bit of volume in the final collar to hold the oarlocks 
              on. 
            
              
                  | 
                Wah-Lah! The 
                  finished article.  | 
               
             
            
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