A few years ago I made some leather tags that could be sewn onto crocheted items like hats. I cut them out with my Cricut Maker and then used my Cricut Cuttlebug to emboss the leather with different designs. They turned out kind of cool, the only problem was that I kind of wanted to be able to make more personalized designs than the Cuttlebug embossing folders allowed.
Since then Cricut has discontinued the Cuttlebug, so although there are other diecutting/embossing machines out there, the one I used is no longer available. Also, they came out with some new blades for the Maker since then, including an engraving and a debossing tip. They have been out for over a year now and ever since they came out I have wanted to revisit that old leather tag project and see how it works with the new tips, and if they allow you to make a more personalized tag.
It took a little bit of trial and error to get the results I was looking for but in the end I was happy with the final product and I thought I would share what worked for me and what didn't.
I used Cricut leather, both genuine and metallic versions. I cut the tags out with the deep cut blade, and tried both the engraving tip and the debossing tip.
I had great results cutting the leather with the deep cut blade. One of the issues I had with the last set is I tried cutting little tiny holes to sew the tags onto the hats and the Cricut really struggled cutting all the way through the little holes, it would have been better to use an awl or punch to make the holes because they just didn't cut well. This time I decided to use leather posts and screws so I cut the holes larger and it worked so much better. So as far as the cutting goes it worked great.
The engraving was a little bit different matter. I tried the engraving tip first and it worked ok, I thought the results were best on the metallic leather. But it was a little hard to see unless you looked at it just right. So I thought I would see how the debossing tip worked. It was not great at all. You could hardly see the design at all and it seemed to slowly lighten over time.
Since neither option turned out exactly the way I was imagining I decided to try something else. I took the debossed or engraved tags (I would recommend engraved) and used my woodburning tool to burn the designs into the leather. This worked really well.
So the winning combination is a Cricut Maker for cutting the tags, and engraving the designs so that you have a guide to follow, then a woodburning tool to finish the designs and make them more visible.
How to Make Leather Tags for Your Crochet Projects
You will need:
- Cricut Maker
- Deep Cut Blade
- Engraving Tip
- strong grip mat
- Leather (metallic or genuine leather sheets)
- Plaid Woodburning tool
- leather screws and posts
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