About the leather
If you chose to order a strap for your buckle then you will be pleased to know that the leather used
to make your belt will be full bridle veg-tan cow hide. Better yet it is oak bark tanned by Bakers of Colyton using traditional methods.
As the best raw material for belting (strong enough to harness a horse) it is rarely, if ever, found in the high street or department store. Per square foot, this quality of leather is too expensive for a belt manufacturer to incorporate and yet still be competitive with the plethora of belts coming in from China, Pakistan, Turkey and Spain.
Instead, belt manufacturers must rely on finding any ingenuity to compete and in this ambition comparable quality is inevitably sacrificed. However all due respect is acknowledged in regard to the 35 member production team at George Stuart Belts who made an exemplary high quality range of product before they too became another casualty of these recent times.
All full bridle saddlers’ leather comes in a waxed finish both sides and can have a difference in thickness in any one hide varying from 3.5 mm to 4.5 mm.
The waxed finish protects the hide from colour staining on the front face. Once cut, both top and bottom (full length) edges must be bevelled and then sealed so that the exposed fibres are coloured and waterproofed. The wax therefore provides a barrier against any minor error in applying this edge colouring stain, which is a non-toxic water based acrylic formula.
Based on the amount of wax that the plough gauge picks up in hand cutting just one hide, that too would soon foul up automated machinery - and down time adds to the production costs.
Today, though, there are still a few retail outlets that provide their customers with belts made from this quality of harness leather, which has always been the material for the traditional British belt. They can be found in gentleman’s outfitters long since catering to the Armed Services with civilian clothes and to the country set who still appreciate the value of quality.