Bohemian Leather Button Cuff  - A  Lil Blue Boo Tutorial

Bohemian Leather Button Cuff - A Lil Blue Boo Tutorial

A great way to make your own hand-made bracelet!

Learn how to create a beautiful bohemian-style leather button cuff using leather dyes and decorative buttons. This tutorial will guide you through dyeing, distressing, and embellishing a plain leather cuff to create a unique accessory.

Shopping list:

Let's get started!

I have jars of buttons all over my studio and I'm always brainstorming different unique ways to use them. I recently ordered some leather cuffs from Dharma Trading and thought the buttons would be a great way to embellish them.

Finished project 1

Buttons galore!

These leather blank cuffs are a great base for a project since the hardware is already attached. The best part is they are really inexpensive and precut!

Start with a boring blank

Step 1: Prepare the dye mixture

I used Angelus Leather Dye and Dye Reducer to dye the leather:

I wanted a lighter shade so Reducer was handy

I mixed the leather dye and reducer in a small bowl:

I mixed the two..

Step 2: Apply the dye

Then I used a cloth to apply it to the the leather. Two coats worked perfectly:

..and applied with a cloth

I recommend using gloves when dyeing. I'm always too impatient, but I don't mind walking around town with discolored hands.

Remember, you're leather, too! Wear gloves.

Step 3: Distress the leather

Once the leather was dry I took a sanding block to distress it. If you want it smooth and supple you can add wax or softener and buff it. I left mine plain because I wanted it slightly dry and distressed:

I sanded out for a distressed look

Step 4: Select your buttons

I sorted out a selection of buttons in a tan, brown and muted palette:

Then.. the button-palooza

Step 5: Prepare your tools

To apply the buttons I used an small 1/16" scrapbook hole punch, a sharp needle type tool, an embroidery needle and DMC thread:

What you'll need

Step 6: Mark button placement

I placed my first button on the cuff and used the sharp tool to mark where I needed to punch holes:

Mark holes to lace on buttons

Step 7: Punch holes

Using a skinny scrapbook punch I punched the small holes using my marks:

There are punches for this but I had this scrapbook punch around

Step 8: Plan your layout

It's easiest to mark several buttons at once

Laying out buttons in advance helps a ton

and then move them off the cuff, but keeping them in the same order as you punch your holes:

Remove them but keep them in configuration

Step 9: Complete your cuff

It only took me about an hour to sew all of these buttons on and I love how eclectic and earthy the cuff turned out!

Finished project 2

More leather cuff ideas to come soon!