Sealable collars without buckles?
Jan. 29th, 2002 01:31 pmI'm looking for ways of making a collar on which I can make a tamper-evident seal, such that you can't take off the collar without breaking the seal. I'd like it to be suitable for long-term wear.
My first thought was to take an ordinary fashion collar, and seal the buckle with sealing wax. The trouble with this is that buckles tend to catch long hair, especially when you sleep. So here's plan B: use a plain wide black satin ribbon, pin it shut with a couple of small safety pins, then put the sealing wax on the safety pins. But I worry the wax might be too brittle.
Any other ideas very welcome!
My first thought was to take an ordinary fashion collar, and seal the buckle with sealing wax. The trouble with this is that buckles tend to catch long hair, especially when you sleep. So here's plan B: use a plain wide black satin ribbon, pin it shut with a couple of small safety pins, then put the sealing wax on the safety pins. But I worry the wax might be too brittle.
Any other ideas very welcome!
no subject
Date: 2002-01-29 05:40 am (UTC)First random thoughts; paper, glued shut or with a staple-less stapler; and can you get those single-use snaps they use on concert wristbands, without the band?
Cable-ties fit in here somewhere, but only as very short lengths to use the mechanism... can't imagine you're any keener on the thought of one all the way 'round your neck than I am.
no subject
Date: 2002-01-29 05:42 am (UTC)Alternatively - ribbon and then sew it. Sign the join in felt tip.
Alternatively 2 if you're feeling dextrous enough not to spill - ribbon and superglue.
no subject
Date: 2002-01-29 05:44 am (UTC)i used to sometimes make ribbon collars and sew myself into them, but that might be a bit of a pain. i stopped when i got sick of turning myself into a pin cushion...
also, it took ages to dry when i washed my hair. i'm really not helping, am i?
no subject
Date: 2002-01-29 05:45 am (UTC)Not sure what to do with them, my heads been fried by using dos apps for two days solid
no subject
Date: 2002-01-29 10:27 am (UTC)Probably worth having the collar made so that it can be worn and adjusted first and then sealed.
So either velcro or bra style hook and eyes, and then eyelets.
For suitable tamper evident machanisms look at:
http://www.seton.co.uk/ (http://www.seton.co.uk/)
the eyelet puting in devices cost about 10 ukp in most habadaherys.
For more ideas why not ask on:
http://www.ogham.org/kink-couture/index.html (http://www.ogham.org/kink-couture/index.html)
no subject
Date: 2002-01-29 01:41 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2002-01-29 02:44 pm (UTC)However I was thinking more along the lines of the various security seals, in the security seals and ties sections.
The Poly-Lok plastic seals can be ordered with up to 17 letters printed on them, so as long as you've got a 5 letter name you can still have "property of XXXXX"
no subject
Date: 2002-01-30 01:43 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2002-01-30 05:52 am (UTC)Also I hand in mind the hole being aligned vertically rather than horizontaly as that would gie the collar more support.
so the holes are like : rather than ..
no subject
Date: 2002-01-30 06:19 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2002-01-30 06:58 am (UTC)The big circles are the eyelets where the seal itself goes through. The bar between the rightmost eyelets is meant to represent the D-ring; you thread the seal through the D-ring rather than covering the D-ring with the seal. The rectangle at the bottom of the L-shape is a small slot cut in the leather. The little circles are pop-studs.
So, step one, close and seal the collar. Obviously the leftmost eyelets go to the back, rather than covering the D-ring. Then wrap the flap that's left around the whole thing: fold it around the back of the collar, then over the top, and across the front. Fasten the poppers together to close the whole thing.
Now the flap covers the whole gubbins, and looks perfectly innocent if a little strange. However, if you undo the pop studs, you can feed the D-ring through the slot, and close it again, to make a workable collar. Ta-daah!
My only worry is that the tamper-resistant seals on seton.co.uk don't seem to be adjustable length; I'd be happier if they worked like cable ties.
no subject
Date: 2002-01-30 08:43 am (UTC)Tape?
Date: 2002-01-29 09:46 am (UTC)Drawing pins?
Date: 2002-01-29 11:07 am (UTC)Re: Drawing pins?
Date: 2002-01-29 11:27 am (UTC)and here's one I made earlier...
Date: 2002-01-30 08:02 am (UTC)anyhow. I made a ribbon collar with seal about a year ago for one girl, which seemed to work quite nicely, and the design could be switched over to leather or fabric quite easily.
it's a ribbon with spring eyelet fastening (might work better with a fabric cover with longer hair - the girl who wore this had short-ish hair). the fastening was sewn into place, and an embroidered eyelet was made in the ribbon, which meant that with the small holes in the fastening, a spiral copper wire seal could be drawn through the collar.
the wire in this one was sealed with a grain of solder and a jeweller's blowtorch (using an insulated aluminium plate to seat the wire on) took about 10 seconds to seal the wire in place, and was quite safe. (well, I've got steady hands)
only nagative comment was that it took ages to dry out after showers, and was worn a couple of times without trouble
so there you go, one practical suggestion.
I've scanned it twice, and stuck the images into a yahoo photos folder (only thing I can grab offhand.)
http://photos.yahoo.com/adrenochrome_hit
is the url to the main page... click on the "yahoo!" folder, and you'll find three photos lurking, one of laura's old cat, Sammy, that I did'nt even realise was still up there till about 15 mins ago, and the two new scans of the collar and a sample seal that I stuck onto it just to scan it.
hopefully, that'll work. if that link goes pear-shaped and you want to see how it came out, then I can happily email the images to people who ask :)
Suz
AKA J.G.Elmslie