"Also I wanted a Cloth Strap /BECAUSE I have a leather strap that turns my shirt orange brown in a cross ways stripe in the summer."
Kudu, I hear you. One of my goals in making leather is to make sure that no dye transfers to anyone's clothes. My dad made a holster 40 years ago that dyed a customer's dash on his pickup, so he warned me when I started. It has taken a TON of experimenting to get something that I am happy with.
Some folks have poked at me for not dark finishing the back of straps. That is the reason. I cannot get a dark solid dye to take on the reverse without transferring when someone sweats or gets caught in the rain. I do a light tan alcohol thinned dye on the reverse, and that seems to hold fine. Gives a nice color too.
Here is my tip for you all: Spray the suede side with Kiwi Suede Protector. You can get it at the grocery store or Walmart. It is like Scotchguard for leather. I once had an oiled holster on a light tan rough-out suede John Wayne style belt. It stained/dyed the belt where the russet holster went. I separated the two, and let the oil dissipate into the suede. Once evened out, I sprayed it with the KIWI and never had a problem again. Works wonders.
I spray all of my dyed suede areas with the Kiwi. Give it a try on your straps Kudu. Maybe a couple of coats.
My acceptable transfer rate of dye to clothing is 0%. That is what I strive for.
God Bless, Marc