Where to Start with Valerie Michael
Valerie Michael is a founding member of the Association of Designer Leatherworkers and has been a professional leatherworker for over twenty years. She is best known for The Leatherworking Handbook, a practical illustrated guide that has become the standard introduction to the craft for English-speaking beginners. Her approach combines thorough technical instruction with well-designed projects that build skills progressively, making complex techniques feel achievable from the very first chapter.
Start here
The Leatherworking Handbook
Valerie Michael · 128 pages · 2006 · Easy
Themes: leatherworking, hand stitching, leather techniques, craft projects, tool guide
The single best introduction to leatherworking in print. Valerie Michael, a founding member of the Association of Designer Leatherworkers with over twenty years of professional experience, covers every fundamental technique in clear, photographed steps: cutting, edge finishing, paring, hand stitching, making pockets, attaching hardware, and decorating surfaces.
Why Start Here
Most leatherworking books fall into one of two camps: either they focus narrowly on a single technique or they throw dozens of projects at you without properly explaining the basics. Michael does neither. She starts with materials and tools, explaining what each one does and when you actually need it, then walks through every core technique with close-up photographs before introducing projects that put those skills together.
The projects are well chosen for building confidence. You begin with simple items like bookmarks and key fobs, move through belts and wallets, and work up to bags and quilted leather pieces. Each project builds on techniques from the previous ones, so by the time you reach the more ambitious items you already have the muscle memory and understanding to pull them off.
What to Expect
A compact 128-page handbook with full-color photographs throughout. The first half covers techniques, the second half covers projects. You will need a basic set of tools to get started: a cutting knife, a steel ruler, a cutting mat, stitching chisels, needles, and waxed thread. Michael explains what to buy and what to skip.