Most custom small tannery "bark" tan sold these days seems to be small soft hides like deer and goat, even down to sqirrrels...hides more suited to home style backyard tanning....ie...hides of a managable size for one man...This seems to lead to the idea that such bark tan deer hides were also the staple leather on the frontier and colonies...is that truly the case? True, bark tan is the traditional way to vegetable tan, be it an oak or sumac derivitive etc...but all quote "bark" tanned leather is not the same....all though I think most colonial leathers were indeed "bark" tanned.
I know the long hunters did a huge business in deer hide, but I thought alot of those were for export?
I also thought the deer hide breeches etc...so popular in the colonies, were cream colored, not the typical reddish brown mottled bark tan color so prized for old looking bags today? Does this imply a different tannage?
I have often read where different animal hides and tanning styles were favored for different end uses, as some were prefered spongy, some stretchy, some stiff, some buttery soft, some water proof, and some just plain exotic...different types of animal hides were also better suited for making different types of things ...from cartridge boxes and shoe soles to gloves, knee breeches and even wall coverings...not to say that the hunter folks living on the frontier, or those that had to just "make do" didnt have to tan and use what leathers they could shoot, but I think typically commercial leathers like cow hide were pretty common and reradily available even in remote hamlets and villages where the tanner and his tannery were community fixtures, while in urban trade centers the sky was the limit.. In fact, in typical rural settlements, I think customarily the tanner got half a hide as his cut for tanning one for the farmer, and the farmer needed the hide seasonally for the traveling cobbler who made and repaired shoes for the farmers family annually...deer hide would not be suitable for that, and the farmer that had no hides to trade, had to buy it from the tanner before the cobbler showed up...
Also, what about buffalo leather? THere was an attempt by a french tanner to establish a buffalo tannery in the mid west (Illinois country) in the mid 1700s...he died and the tannery closed, but they must have thought it was worth the try for some reason?
I guess that Im just not all that convinced that bark tan deer hide like we are seeing today was in fact a common leather used for bag making even on the frontier, unless all of the bags once made from it have been used up, thrown away or otherwise disappeared? I know there are many examples of deer being used, but not nearly for the majority?
TCA