🖤 Punch Perfect Holes, Every Time — Because Your Craft Deserves Precision
The OWDEN Professional 6pc Leather Hollow Punch Set features six precision steel punches ranging from 1.0 to 5.0mm, designed for clean, accurate holes in leather and various materials. Its rust-resistant black finish and ergonomic slim design ensure durability and ease of use, while the included mini cutting mat protects surfaces and enhances accuracy. Ideal for professionals and enthusiasts aiming for flawless craftsmanship.
A**R
Nice
Really easy to use. Accurate, multiple sizes, accessible and punches thru leather like butter. 👍
M**D
Great
Great Quality, easy to use. I'm not a leather worker by any means, i used these to add holes to my belt because I have been on a major diet. The kit they come in is very portable and sturdy enough that you can leave them in it long term.
K**T
Works great
This is perfect for the person with a small wrist or just need an extra punch in your show strap.
B**S
Pretty Good For The Money
These are pretty good for the money. It is nice to have dedicated hole punches, rather than a hole punch kit with one shaft and several different sized tips. However, these punches are quite short and we often maul our pointer finger knuckle where it attaches to the hand, as it is difficult to hold the hole punch while fitting our hand below the level of the top of the short hole punch. When we strike the hole punch, we often strike that knuckle first, which is consistently painful.Also, these punches have some type of coating, perhaps black oxide, likely to prevent rust from forming on the metal while warehoused in humid climates, or during transpacific shipping. These coatings, often found on eastern leather craft tools, interfere with the use of these tools, specifically in regards to leather craft. Often punching/stitching irons with these coatings make it exceptionally difficult to remove the iron from the leather once it has been punched, which can damage the leather during the attempted extraction. The same is true for these hole punches. They have about a millimeter of sharpened steel showing at the tip of the punch, but it is common to punch through significantly more than 1mm of leather. These punches can get stuck in the leather. Not as badly as stitching irons, but some twisting and pulling can be necessary to remove the punches from the leather, potentially causing the same type of damage or stretching, or fatigue of the leather.There are also grind marks around the punching tip of these hole punches. Basically where the punches were tapered into a cone, and sharpened, there are many, hundreds? of ridges around the punching end of the hole punch. I believe the black oxide coating may have also been used to cover up these tooling marks. But, these ridges act somewhat like velcro, or ridged nails or screws, the ridges lock into the material of the leather, and make extraction of the punch more difficult than it needs to be, and again, potentially damaging your leather project.You can fix all of these problems, if you take sole responsibility for your actions, and are competent working with tools and modifying tools. I fixed my punches, and they are significantly better. I chucked up each punch in my cordless drill, though a corded drill is even better, and used small strips of sandpaper, pinched around the tip of the punch, which was spinning at max speed in my drill. These punches arrive sharp, so please keep in mind you're pinching with your fingers, only separated by the width of your sandpaper, a circular knife blade spinning at several hundred or perhaps, thousands of RPM.FIrst, I started with about 220 grit, high quality sand paper. After a few minutes, and a few strips, I'd pretty much removed most of the gritty black oxide, or whatever type of coating it is, except for that left in the tooling grooves ringing the conic section, the tip of hole punch. Then I stepped up to a silicon carbide wet dry sandpaper at 400 grit. I proceeded to spin the punch at max speed in my drill and sanded off most of the tooling rings, and the black oxide in their deepest valleys.Then, I stepped up to 800 grit SC sandpaper and removed the last of the tooling marks left by Owden's manufacturing. I may have used the paper wet at this stage, can't recall, I did all the punches in a couple of sessions. After the 800 grit removed the very last of the tooling marks and black oxide, I began to shape the conic section of the hole punch. The hole of each punch is roughly the correct size, I have not metered them, but I expect them to be accurate, but, the punch tip flares out quite wide, so while the actual hole of the hole punch is 2mm, the tip of the hole punch quickly flares out to 4mm, then 5mm. The effect of this is the punch can stretch out your leather around the hole. So if you have a rivet that needs a 2mm hole/shaft to sit in, the outside dimension of these punches can create a 3, 4mm hole.Basically, the tips are too thick for the size of the hole being punched (not on the 1, and 1.5mm punches, they're sized relatively well). So, I thinned the punch tips, so they didn't flare out so wide. You have to make sure you don't heat up the tips. You might have to step down to more aggressive grits to do the shaping, I think I did, I think I went back down to 220, shaped them, and then went back up the grits to 800-1000. After that, I used a spongier strop loaded with Tandy's Jeweler's Rouge, the white stuff, but you can use any honing, polishing compounds, wet, dry or waxy. You just want a mirror finish on the conic hole punching area of the punch.So after those couple hours of work, these punches are FANTASTIC. With our old Tandy punches, we had to POUND the punch to get it through leather, not with these Owdens. Just this morning, I taped the punch just to get ready to strike it, and just that tap put in a perfectly sized, totally clean (not hairy at all) hole. We can punch SO much faster now. If we've marked out four locations for a 2mm hole on the bottom of a handbag, it's just bam, bam, bam, bam. DONE!I swear, you don't know how much time you are losing using those multi-tip punches, and using punches that have a coating on them... how much time you spend spinning, twisting, trying to pull the punch out of the leather. It really adds up. If you want to do leather work professionally, it is all about speed AND accuracy. These Owden punches will get you both, if you make the modifications I discussed. And I'm finding, we have to modify all of the leather working tools we purchase. We don't buy super high end tools, maybe they don't need modification, but anything that is reasonably priced, even expensive stuff, they'll still require some modifications, just to make them work better, more cleanly, more quickly, just the way you want them to work.OR, you can go out and buy a set of this type of punches and spend $150 on a 5 punch set, or buy them individually for $30 each. Maybe they won't need any work. Maybe your time is worth that expenditure? Maybe you don't have the tools to modify your tools? Maybe you don't have the skills? It's all up to you, and what you want to do.But this set now works excellently after a couple hours modifying them, taking the coating off the punching tips, thinning the tips down a bit, and polishing them to a shining mirror finish. They punch effortlessly, and just naturally pop right out. We've used them on the little, like 4 inch pounding mat included with this set, but really we use them on a large slab of Poundo. But, we plan on switching to an HDPE cutting board, but old tools and techniques die hard.AND ONE LAST THING!We wish that there wasn't a 1mm and a 1.5mm punch in this set. We wish the 1.5mm was a 6mm punch instead. We don't need our leather punches in 0.5mm steps, but we do need LARGER punches. We do wish that we bought a set that went from 1mm to 12mm, or even up to 25mm! OR EVEN BETTER, if they were in SAE, Imperial measurements! But whatever. This set of punches is great, is a great value, and work very well if you modify them.ALL THE BEST!
M**E
Leather punches
These punches are great.
V**E
Using it to punch hole in cat treat for dispensing pills
My cat needs a pill every 3 days. He's become clairvoyant and knows when it's pill time and will do anything to avoid getting close enough for me to grab him. (He's like Velcro all other times). I tried the pill pockets you can buy online. He liked them at first, until I bought more bags, and then decided to ignore them from that point on. I tried pill maskers. No go. I finally found a treat that was gummy enough (Jungle Calling chicken bites for dogs and cats...I've tried many treat brands in the process). I use this leather punch tool to make a hole. Slip his little pill in there and close it back up with the piece the punch removed. So far he's none the wiser. I only wish I could get the little piece out of the punch easier. I guess I could try a paper clip. It's a nice compact kit and very glad it has its own cutting board.
R**L
Amazing! Very sharp & well made.
Absolutely amazing! Very sharp & leave crisp, clean holes every time. I've purchased a few different hole punches for my leatherwork and these are by far the best. Highly recommend.
M**Y
Belt and shoe strap saver
This allowed me to create bespoke leather belts and sandal straps to the perfect size. The leather was easy to puncture. Saves a trip to the cobbler or for leather repair.
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