How to tan small hides
Things You'll Need
- Fresh hide
- Mild dish soap
- 2 lb. plus 2 cups salt, divided
- 1-gallon bucket
- 2 cups fireplace ash
- Gallon-sized freezer bag
- Dull knife
- 5-gallon bucket with lid
- Safety goggles
- Rubber gloves
- 8 oz. battery acid
- Paint stirrer or similar stick
- Brick or similar weight
- Sharp knife
- Nails
- Board
- Spray bottle
- Dryer
- Tennis balls or sneakers
- Wire brush
Instructions
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1
Wash the hide with dish soap, rinse well, then gently squeeze (do not wring) out excess water. Soak the hide in 1 gallon of water mixed with 1 cup of salt for an hour or so.
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2
Mix 1 cup salt with 2 cups fireplace ash. Remove the pelt from the salt water, squeeze out the water, then lay it fur-side down and spread the salt/ash mixture all over the skin side until the mixture gets crumbly.
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3
Fold the pelt lengthwise with the fur side out, then roll it up and place it in a gallon-sized freezer bag. Put it in the refrigerator for two weeks.
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4
Remove the hide from the refrigerator, shake off the excess salt and ash, and place it fur side down on a solid surface. Scrape off the salt and ash with a dull knife--you'll also be scraping away a thin membrane covering the skin.
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5
Mix 2 lb. of salt with 2 gallons of water in the 5-gallon bucket and stir well. Then add the 8 oz.. of battery acid--be sure to put on your gloves and goggles first. Add the hide, stir again, then weigh it down with a brick and let it sit in a warm room for a week.
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6
Check to see if the hide is tanned by making a small slit in the thickest part with a sharp knife. If the tanning solution has penetrated all of the way and the color is uniform, the tanning is done. If not, let it sit another 3 days, then check it again. Repeat as necessary.
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7
Remove the hide from the tanning solution, wash it in a mild soap solution, then squeeze out the excess water. Nail the hide to a board and let it sit until almost dry and stiff but not hard. If it does get too dry (hard), re-wet it with water from a spray bottle.
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8
Work the hide over a chair back, clothesline, or something similar. Pull it back and forth with the skin side down until it is entirely dry and soft.
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9
Toss the softened hide in a clothes dryer with a few tennis balls or sneakers. Let it tumble around on the fluff (no heat) cycle for half an hour so it gets even softer and the fur fluffs up.
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10
Use a wire brush to scrape away any bumps on the underside of the hide.
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