Can The Leather Tabs on a Guitar Strap Be Repaired?
Published On: 11-09-2011 04:36pm
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Can this guitar strap be saved? When you have a guitar strap you love,
that's the first question-- perhaps the only question-- you have when
the dreaded "Rip of Death" happens to your leather button tab. The
answer depends on how your guitar strap is constructed. If the pin hole
is punched in a solid leather strip that adjusts only at the back, then
no, you're out of luck. If, on the other hand, your strap is
polypropylene or fabric that is riveted or stitched to the leather
button tab, then yes, perhaps your strap can be repaired. It just takes a
little creativity and some puzzle-solving skills on the part of the
person undertaking the repair.
I recently had a Myspace friend
approach me about repairing his 20-year-old guitar strap, affectionately
named "Old Blue." Old Blue was in sad shape indeed. Both the front and
back leather button tabs were hopelessly stretched and torn and he had
tried to repair them using what looked like wood staples. I gave it
some thought and decided to put my hand to saving Old Blue.

I
started by cutting the back leather piece off the adjustment bar and
replacing it with my own particular leather button tab design. This
involved cutting a 2-inch leather strip, looping it through the
adjustment bar, sealing the two leather layers with commercial strength
tanner's glue, and double whip-stitching it with leather sewing thread.
That was pretty easy.
Repairing the front tab was going to be
more of a challenge. The front tab was riveted through the decorative
surface fabric, the polypropylene foundation, and the leather itself,
with two rivets so the only way I was going to be able to get the torn
tab off was to cut the fabric and the foundation.

One
of my worries was that the decorative fabric, once cut, was going to
fray and also that, as I cut and repaired, the strap was going to lose
length. The way I solved the fraying issue was to seal the fabric
threads with a thin layer of tanner's glue.
I looked for a
polished metal adjustment bar to use on the front of the strap but what I
found had tiny sharp, unfinished spots that I worried would wear on the
strap over time. I settled on a two-inch polished steel ring that
wouldn't wear on the fabric and would compensate for any lost length
when the front tab was cut off. I looped the doubled leather over the
ring, folded the sealed fabric and foundation under so there was no
exposure to wear, and stitched the fabric and foundation to the ring,
preserving the material edges and the strap's length.

When I
had finished the repairs, I emailed pictures to my customer and he was
thrilled with the results. I was, too, actually, because I had saved a
dearly loved guitar strap, it had not cost him a fortune, and it was a
new service I was able to provide. So, Old Blue is back in business and I
have a new and happy customer. Who could ask for more? Thanks for
reading! Terri
