![]() Try to stick to only one word, since authors will sometimes use their middle initial, then not, change names, etc.Ħ. Use the search function as you normally would. "PASTE" or CTRL"V" what you copied into the blank page(it could take a while depending on the size of the page)ĥ. Open a blank page in your favorite word processing program.Ĥ. METHOD ONE(downside is it takes some effort and time):ġ. HOW TO MAKE THIS MAGAZINE CATALOG SEARCHABLE: I can't pay that much for an individual issue, but apparently other people can. Ebayers are selling individual issues for over $20 now. One note on buying back issues - I strongly recommend checking the Journal website to see if they still have the back issue you need before you go looking on ebay. They solved the need to keep it up to date by selling the update for $10 yearly - I don't think you can get fairer than that! I've bought one and can say firmly that it is well worth the money if you have access to the issues of the magazines it covers. Leather Crafters & Saddlers Journal has an index available for sale. Fortunately, you don't have to patiently wait for me to get this page filled in before you can find stuff. So if you're looking for specific articles, just remember that Murphy insists the article you are looking for will be in an issue I'm missing - even if it's just ONE(1) issue I'm missing(and I'm still missing several between 20). These holes really chap my britches, but even my superpowers have failed to scare up the missing issues. 2007 issue until you hit when I began my subscription in 2019. NOTE: I was able to acquire the first 16 years of this title, and then I start missing issues starting with the Sept/Oct. They have a website( and they HAVE AN INDEX FOR SALE!): So drop me a line if you find this catalog helpful - I always appreciate knowing the long hours I put into this has helped someone connect to the materials they're hunting for. I thought that was the Library of Congress's duty, but that's a myth. Can't do that if no one does the cataloging. I am a big believer in being able to look stuff up. My feeling is, if it's not cataloged, it may as well not have been published because no one will ever find it again. This doesn't mean I haven't made mistakes too, but I do my best to minimize them and make these catalogs as complete as possible. Also, there are a lot of typos in the Table of Contents, and I corrected them when I caught them (Carolyn Melvin gave a pattern for Chaps, but it's listed in the ToC as Straps, for instance.) I enter the ToC, then I go through the issue page by page and add any details that I feel would help people find the articles they need - there's occasional articles that got left out of the ToCs entirely. I've noted this in the " NOTES:" section of those issues so that you'll know you need both issues to complete a project. One of the things of special note about this catalog- There were several issues where the pattern for a project got published in the pattern insert sheet of the issue following the one that published the article. In case I didn't convey how much I love this magazine - if you have any interest at all in leathercraft, you will not be sorry you subscribed to this magazine. Until then, I'll continue to accumulate the magazines and catalog them. I'm slowly lacing together a leather-working bib page, but don't have the library needed to make a good start so it is slow going. It doesn't mean I've never wanted to, though. I never got into the decorative side of leather working - my experience is all practical. Straps on tack is forever in need of cleaning, conditioning and repair. I grew up on a farm, so leatherworking was something you did as a matter of course - especially if you owned horses as we did. I am soooo glad I did! I was very happy with the 3 issues I bought, and when I went looking for more information on-line, found out it not only had legs, but was still running! So of course I immediately signed up for a new subscription. Didn't know LC had competition - wonder how long it lasted." and I bought the small lot. SUMMARY: I've been trying to fill out my run of "The Leather Craftsman", and ran across a listing on ebay for something called the "The Leather Crafters Journal". ![]() PUBLISHER, but are scanned from my private collection. NOTE: ALL COVER IMAGES THIS PAGE ARE PROPERTY OF Published by: Leather Craftsman Journal, Inc., Rhinelander, WI 1991 - ?: William(Bill) and Dorothy(Dot) Reis 1996 - Ongoing: becomes The Leather Crafters & Saddlers JournalĮditor(s): Jan. Shootin Leather- 10 Tips for Better Photos Leather Crafters Meet in Indianapolis(photos) How's the Book Coming?(The Stohlman Encyclopedia of Saddle Making).Notes: This issue came with a pattern pullout sheet section. LEATHER CRAFTERS & SADDLERS JOURNAL Magazine Review
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