Req 3b — Clean Cutting
A rough cut announces itself right away. Wavy lines, overcut corners, and ragged edges are hard to hide later. Cutting leather well is mostly about control: the right blade, the right backing surface, and the patience to let the tool do the work.
Set up for a better cut
Start with a sharp blade and a firm cutting surface. If the blade drags, tears, or forces you to lean your weight into it, stop and change blades or sharpen before continuing. Leather responds much better to several light, accurate passes than one heavy pass.
🎬 Video: Best Practices for Cutting Leather (video) — https://youtu.be/KwamMpHW9Ls?si=8jzWvnYf8rteJcQd
Techniques that help
For straight lines, a metal ruler or straightedge can help guide the blade. For curves, move the leather or your body position so the cut stays comfortable instead of twisting your wrist into an awkward angle.
Cut just outside the line if you know you will trim to final shape later. For inside corners, slow down before the turn. For long straps or borders, check the line from more than one angle before cutting.
Common problems
If the edge looks fuzzy, the blade may be dull. If the cut line wanders, your straightedge may be shifting or you may be cutting too quickly. If the leather bunches or lifts, your surface underneath may be too soft.
Clean cutting leads directly into the next skill. Once the shape is correct, you can place holes exactly where the project needs them.