Yelloweyes
Thanks video that was mentioned is notorious for producing 'baggy' upper. For the most part though you will always have some excess hide to cut off at the heal seem and is not necessarily a bad thing, but excess from side to side on moc will cause the 'baggy' thang everytime and should be avoided. There are several things that can help cut down on this happening when you are making your mocs.
Every hide has some stretch too it and some have more than others, the trick is finding the ones that do not stretch excessively. You see hides stretch more from side to side than from head to butt of the hide. Also, a hide will stretch more near the stomach (which is the outer side edges of a hide), than it does along the back bone. When you lay the upper pattern out on the hide avoid the temptation of maximizing the hide use because of this stretch factor. By this I mean make sure that the leather under the pattern is as even in thickness as possible and that what stretch that is there runs from toe to heal of your pattern and not across the moc.
Now, I disagree with hockeyfan in that I do stretch the upper as I sew it around the mocs. I do not tork the heck out of it but I keep the hide smooth and snug as I sew it around the toe and back to the arch.
Now when I make my patterns I trace the foot with the persons weight on it (which if the moc is for yourself means having someone else trace it for you) and before the weight is removed I measure across the arch of the foot (which is about where your shoe string tie on a normal low top tennis shoe) and mark the sole where that measurement was taken. I then run a line down the center of the moc sole (this line runs from the measured center of the heel to the big toe side of the center toe and I often mark this front mark when I am tracing the foot) and then I draw a line across the pattern between the arch marks making sure that this line is as close to 90 degrees from the heel/toe line as possible by eye. The I use the arch measurement to continue the arch line out to size. (ie. If the arch measurement is 8" then put 4" on either side of the heel toe line and do not add the extra length that the video suggests.) Now after rounding the sole to shape, draw your upper pattern using the these marks. Just swing the line out from about a 1/8-1/4" in front of the toes out to the ends of the arch line, then use a ruler to run a line on back from that toward the heel along that same curve shape.( the finished pattern should look a bit like an inverted V, except for the rounded area at the toe)
Not sure if you will be able to understand this without the picture I had planned to accompany these instructions, but with any luck I have made it clear enough.
Thanks video that was mentioned is notorious for producing 'baggy' upper. For the most part though you will always have some excess hide to cut off at the heal seem and is not necessarily a bad thing, but excess from side to side on moc will cause the 'baggy' thang everytime and should be avoided. There are several things that can help cut down on this happening when you are making your mocs.
Every hide has some stretch too it and some have more than others, the trick is finding the ones that do not stretch excessively. You see hides stretch more from side to side than from head to butt of the hide. Also, a hide will stretch more near the stomach (which is the outer side edges of a hide), than it does along the back bone. When you lay the upper pattern out on the hide avoid the temptation of maximizing the hide use because of this stretch factor. By this I mean make sure that the leather under the pattern is as even in thickness as possible and that what stretch that is there runs from toe to heal of your pattern and not across the moc.
Now, I disagree with hockeyfan in that I do stretch the upper as I sew it around the mocs. I do not tork the heck out of it but I keep the hide smooth and snug as I sew it around the toe and back to the arch.
Now when I make my patterns I trace the foot with the persons weight on it (which if the moc is for yourself means having someone else trace it for you) and before the weight is removed I measure across the arch of the foot (which is about where your shoe string tie on a normal low top tennis shoe) and mark the sole where that measurement was taken. I then run a line down the center of the moc sole (this line runs from the measured center of the heel to the big toe side of the center toe and I often mark this front mark when I am tracing the foot) and then I draw a line across the pattern between the arch marks making sure that this line is as close to 90 degrees from the heel/toe line as possible by eye. The I use the arch measurement to continue the arch line out to size. (ie. If the arch measurement is 8" then put 4" on either side of the heel toe line and do not add the extra length that the video suggests.) Now after rounding the sole to shape, draw your upper pattern using the these marks. Just swing the line out from about a 1/8-1/4" in front of the toes out to the ends of the arch line, then use a ruler to run a line on back from that toward the heel along that same curve shape.( the finished pattern should look a bit like an inverted V, except for the rounded area at the toe)
Not sure if you will be able to understand this without the picture I had planned to accompany these instructions, but with any luck I have made it clear enough.
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