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Jerky Horse

Seb Lucas

I'll Lock Up
Messages
7,562
Location
Australia
Did a search on this but didn't quite find the right answers.

How does jerky horse wear and is it a lighter hide than FQHH?

I am also concerned that it might be surface painted which might wear off in ugly patches.

What's the truth about this hide?
 
Messages
15,563
Location
East Central Indiana
The only jerky horse that I have is an A2 weight Aero. It has no 'heavy' painted on finish..but does have a lighter colored undercoat that will show through with wear. Not a stark contrast,however...but gives it a very nice burnished appearance in a short while. I'm assuming the outer dye is evenly sprayed on. Seems to wear with a quite natural look. Mine is russet. Not sure how a darker brown would do. I'm assuming it would have a darker base coat that would also show more blended wear rather than an ugly contrast.
HD
 

majormajor

One Too Many
Messages
1,713
Location
UK
I've upped this before, so my apologies, but this is midweight Jerky FQHH.

An excellent hide - lighter than the really heavy stuff, but seems (to me) to be a touch heavier than the A2 stuff. Surface is perfectly solid - no odd coatings on there:D;)

marinenewfit.jpg
 
Last edited:

DiamondDave

Vendor
Messages
97
Location
Diamond Cap Co.Tulsa, OK
Gents....another misnomer here...ALL Horsehide is FQHH! Front Quarter was a name used in the past in an attempt to make it sound special. All HH's are actually the front 3/4 of the horse, from the rump forward to the neck and some leg. Oft times these are delivered to us as "splits", which are split at the spine, but many times we get "whole hides" depending on the tannery and what is ordered.

Just thought I would clear this up.
DD
 

coloradorider

One of the Regulars
Messages
182
Location
Denver, CO
Gents....another misnomer here...ALL Horsehide is FQHH! Front Quarter was a name used in the past in an attempt to make it sound special. All HH's are actually the front 3/4 of the horse, from the rump forward to the neck and some leg. Oft times these are delivered to us as "splits", which are split at the spine, but many times we get "whole hides" depending on the tannery and what is ordered.

Just thought I would clear this up.
DD

There's pictures of what you're talking about at Horween's site - here.
 

Windward

Practically Family
Messages
558
Location
Europe
AERO jerky seal brown FQHH....

yes, an excellent hide - and yes - much lighter than the heavy FQHH ... after wearing in the rain / under the shower :D - yeah its buttery soft ... love it!



 

rocketeer

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,605
Location
England
Gents....another misnomer here...ALL Horsehide is FQHH! Front Quarter was a name used in the past in an attempt to make it sound special. All HH's are actually the front 3/4 of the horse, from the rump forward to the neck and some leg. Oft times these are delivered to us as "splits", which are split at the spine, but many times we get "whole hides" depending on the tannery and what is ordered.

Just thought I would clear this up.
DD
Showing my ignorance, I always thought it was the front part of the horse including the sides up to the back legs. So thanks for that bit of info:)
Now then, whats this: http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/50s-Vtg-FRONT-QUARTER-STEER-HIDE-Black-Leather-Police-Motorcycle-Jacket-Sz-40-/261216321737?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item3cd1b4c0c9
Is there such a thing or is the seller just trying to confuse buyers with a dodgy description thinking they are getting front quarter horse?
Johnny Tee
 

pipvh

Practically Family
Messages
644
Location
England
Looks more like the original maker trying to big-up plain old steerhide. Presumably the principle is the same though, so perhaps not actually wrong?
 

Windward

Practically Family
Messages
558
Location
Europe
Nick - I can tell you it won't be too long to achieve these look and the best ... all without artificial treatment.
 

Plumbline

One Too Many
Messages
1,271
Location
UK
I had a LONG conversation with Skip and Nick Horween about this .... and NEITHER of them HAD EVER HEARD OF "JERKY" HORSE. In fact, I was asked to give the Aero description. Their view was the more traditional tanners view re. quarters, sides, shells and splits ..... the word "Jerky" was a new one to them.

Only a portion of the Horsehide that goes into jackets is actually "Front Quarter" ... in fact about a quarter of it :) .... typically the Aero order is sides ( which include the front Quarter) ... I have seen it being produced, being put into boxes and shipped from Horween. I imagine the rest will also get the same ... sides or full hides. Other suppliers may vary ... but of the three horsehide suppliers / producers I have visited neither of them knew what "Jerky" Horsehide was !!!!!!

From what I have seen "jerky" is a jacket manufaturer term for lighter weight horsehide ( including Chromexcel) ... I used to have an Aero "Jerky" horsehide Highwayman ( they were selling them cheap @ 2005 ) and it was just a touch lighter than my Heavy FQHH Highwayman ... and a little easier to break in.
 
Messages
10,181
Location
Pasadena, CA
All the HH jackets I've owned from different tanneries have pieces that are thinner and very grainy/wrinkly. I imagine a "Jerky" jacket is one made with mostly those pieces. I think it's just "where" it comes from on the hides. I can take some shots of the pieces on my Shinki Ventura hide to show it.Probably indeed a marketing term... but it always makes me hungry when I see it lol
 

Jonst

New in Town
Messages
12
Location
UK
Windward, thanks for the great photos. Do you have any shots of the whole jacket? Thanks, Jon
 

DiamondDave

Vendor
Messages
97
Location
Diamond Cap Co.Tulsa, OK
I had a LONG conversation with Skip and Nick Horween about this .... and NEITHER of them HAD EVER HEARD OF "JERKY" HORSE. In fact, I was asked to give the Aero description. Their view was the more traditional tanners view re. quarters, sides, shells and splits ..... the word "Jerky" was a new one to them.

Only a portion of the Horsehide that goes into jackets is actually "Front Quarter" ... in fact about a quarter of it :) .... typically the Aero order is sides ( which include the front Quarter) ... I have seen it being produced, being put into boxes and shipped from Horween. I imagine the rest will also get the same ... sides or full hides. Other suppliers may vary ... but of the three horsehide suppliers / producers I have visited neither of them knew what "Jerky" Horsehide was !!!!!!

From what I have seen "jerky" is a jacket manufaturer term for lighter weight horsehide ( including Chromexcel) ... I used to have an Aero "Jerky" horsehide Highwayman ( they were selling them cheap @ 2005 ) and it was just a touch lighter than my Heavy FQHH Highwayman ... and a little easier to break in.

Good to know...I will start throwing away the rest of the hide
From behind the front leg...or ya know NOT! LOL!

This is of course what the tanners and jacket makers want
You to believe, but I am here to tell you that NO one-pieced
Back was ever made from just the front piece of a HH....all stop!
It is just not possible!
DD
 
Messages
10,181
Location
Pasadena, CA
Here's some pics of the stuff I mentioned above. I love this stuff, and it's thinner than the rest - my Aero's are like that too in smaller places that don't matter. It's actually very neat.

EFF30282-EFE8-4E25-80AA-B066C31CF86A-237-0000000644CBC07B.jpg

5E12B075-7222-482D-9389-B5D943EB5DB0-237-000000063CBA68C0.jpg
 

frussell

One Too Many
Messages
1,409
Location
California Desert
Plumbline, Butte, my thoughts exactly regarding "jerky." It's another way of saying "wrinkled bits." We've seen lots of posts on here for a few years with someone asking about a particular patch on their jacket, or sleeve that they thought was graining up different, or "dry," that just seems like what Aero calls Jerky. My Teamster has one shoulder that is very stiff, and the other shoulder is most definitely "jerky," even though they are one piece of the same hide. It's all in what part of the horse it comes from. Too bad the pieces I used to get for tooling leather called "horse butts" were always too small to make anything other than short belts or spur straps, because that was some dense, tough stuff. It came in narrow strips, best in the center. I have to think it would have made excellent jackets, but they would have been many-paneled. You gotta love the spin of taking a potential negative and making it a whole separate category. Personally, I'd love a whole jacket in jerky, as I like the random way it marbles and grains up as it ages. Waiting for the rest of a jacket to catch up to the "jerky" parts is another matter. Frank
 

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