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Please - show us your collection and...

Posted: Wed 26. Feb 2014, 14:56
by Robby Amper
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...and - more important - the story behind it!

This thread is all about you. If you have only one whip or 100. Introduce the other members to your world. Again - it is nor important what the price of that whip(s) is or was. All that counts is, what it means to you. And I'd be happy, if you would share this love, this memory, this passion with us.

Oh,yes… This area is not visible for guests. This is your own area. Only for members. Strictly!


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Posted: Wed 26. Feb 2014, 15:30
by Bobbi Holyoak
I love this idea Robby. xox

Posted: Wed 26. Feb 2014, 16:07
by Terry Shaw
Robby, thanks for providing the space! As to my collection, everyone around here has seen it as it grows. You're all watching as I go from whip #1 to now plaiting whip #4. But at some point today it will be fun to gather them all together for a family photo!

~T.

Posted: Wed 26. Feb 2014, 16:30
by Jonathan Lewis
Great idea Robby. I'll post my collection and stories soon.

Posted: Thu 27. Feb 2014, 11:23
by Robert Gage
This is a real challenge, Robby! It will take me a while, but I'll work on it. I'm still struggling with the pictures on your site: sometimes they don't appear at all (but others comment on them, so I know they're there), and I'm seeking profession help in posting pictures. (I haven't managed it yet, despite your clear instruction.) I'll also have to get some good photos. The standard set by Mario Desgronte is so high....

Posted: Thu 27. Feb 2014, 13:36
by Robby Amper
Oh, please don't do that! It's some time now, since I told Mario the exact specs what these pics have to look like. And in the meantime he has a lot of experience. The picture of Simon's whip I took with my cell phone cam. Nothing sophisticated. As long as one can see what's on that picture...great! And a little story on top which explains everything...perfect!

It's never a question of HiRes pics or not. It's a matter of your personal style, idea and character. And if you are true to yourself - you cant' do anything wrong. Impossible!

Robby

Posted: Wed 14. Jan 2015, 20:32
by Christopher Lu
I was hoping find at least one other photo already posted and I'm fairly intimidated to be the first to post a photo, but here it goes:

I attended an event called Flow Camp in 2011 and met a man named Phoenix that taught whips there. This was my first event and he was my first whip teacher. After some time with trying different whips, I tried to make one. The first one I didn't even de-core the paracord, or have a belly plait and the core was a triangular section of rolled up denim cut out jeans. So a very, very terrible whip. I told Phoenix what I had done and he encouraged me to keep trying, not take short cuts and improve. 5 or 6 whips later, Phoenix's fiance asked a rather large favor of me. If I, an unknown, inexperienced, beginning whip maker would make Phoenix a custom whip with his name on it, with different plaiting styles, in his favorite colors for his wedding present. Me being a complete idiot said, emphatically, 'YES!".

I spent the next month, researching the crap out of whip design and construction. Bought 4 different whip making books, read them cover to cover, looked at several different forums (found this one in the process), and talked to many, many whip crackers. I estimated that I spent almost 40 hours that month just researching whip making. I couldn't find a lettering method I liked so I had to invent my own. I tested it out on of few cylinders and in the end, about 3 weeks before their wedding, started making the whip. After about 20 hours of math, cutting, sanding, shot loading, several mistakes, un-plaiting, re-plaiting, and even adding more weight to the handle to make it feel more balanced I had made the best whip I could at the time.

The night before, I drove out to Indy and met up with them to go over the schedule and showed his soon to be wife. She approved. (Whew!)
The next day she gave him the whip, and his eyes lit up. He took it out gave it a few cracks and smiled. He eyeballed a dangling cord hanging from the ceiling, threw the whip at it and bang, hit it on the first try.

Later I got to meet his whip teacher, Robert Dante. Dante said that when he saw the whip, he was impressed with how it behaved given that I had made less than a dozen whips at this point, and gave me some good pointers.

I realize that it is not the most impressive whip, it would not even pass my own inspection, but it means more to me than any other I have made. It was my first, real effort in making a quality whip. Since then I have learned a lot more, but never have I gained more knowledge from making a single whip than from this one.

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Later I got to make my first stock whip for the founder of Flow Camp.
It's has similar sentimental value, but much less effort. Here it is:

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Posted: Wed 14. Jan 2015, 23:24
by Robert Gage
Wow! That's seriously impressive - especially so early on in your whip-making career! Congratulations!

Posted: Thu 15. Jan 2015, 16:03
by Caleb Krug
Wow! That's some serious perseverance!
Turned out very impressive for a whip that early in the learning game!
So am I correct in saying that you actually weaved these handles? If so, how did you manage that!?

Posted: Thu 15. Jan 2015, 18:12
by Bobbi Holyoak
Very cool Chris! Thanks for sharing!

Posted: Thu 15. Jan 2015, 18:15
by Bobbi Holyoak
I honestly thought I had already posted pictures in the topic.... well better late than never!

Here is my collection of whips that I did not make. (minus 2 from Steve Huntres that I gave a away a year ago)

Tyler Blake, Whips n whatknots, Rhett Kelley, Peter Jack.

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Posted: Wed 25. Mar 2015, 04:41
by Gordon Nielson
Christopher Lu said, "but never have I gained more knowledge from making a single whip than from this one." That is really what keeps me going. Always improving and learning from experience.
Those whips are really impressive, and I can imagine the time they took to plait letters. Great work, Keep it up!
Gordon