
I have also purchased a dual choppershox kit for suspension, as well as a kit to cover it with leather.


How I learned to tool?
I watched all the videos by this chick on the expert village youtube channel. The info is good, but nothing is going to make up for just doing it. Trial and error. Here is the link to the youtube stuff.
I couldn't get the leather to stretch over the curve of the back of the seat without showing dimples visible from the top (I can't care how the bottom looks, not a professional here). I improvised with a leather tool belt and leather boot laces bought at OSH. I cut the belt to fit the area I needed, laced it up with the leather by punching holes with an awl and drill bit when I could, and dyed the whole thing to blend together well. Real McGyver stuff. Leather Belt and laces were around $20. Still around $100 spent for a custom tooled seat. Plus it falls into the overall theme of the bike - "Blame Me, I Built It." The seat is mostly black, tan for the hockey mask, some laquer pens were used and sanded down later to get the weathered blue and gold on the mask rivets. We shall see if the color lasts. Even if the whole thing wears down, I can do another one, learn from past mistakes, and still do it for around $100 bucks. I could probably do one for someone else if I was inclined. And I thought my BA in Art was wasted. Ha!


No comments:
Post a Comment