Leathercrafting at Pepi’s Workshop in Red Lodge, Montana, United States, is a one-hour lesson that pairs hands-on craft with local character. Step inside a small, timbered shop where leather dust hangs in the light and the tools on the bench have been used to shape belts, wallets, and book covers for decades. This experience focuses on traditional leather tooling: carving, stamping, edge finishing, and hand-stitching a finished piece you take home.
The scene centers on an aged workbench, stacks of vegetable-tanned hides, metal stamps, and a heavy leather mallet. You’ll learn to transfer a pattern, cut and bevel edges, and create textured impressions that catch light on saddle-brown leather. Materials are locally sourced when available, and instructors emphasize time-honored techniques that keep an American frontier craft alive. For visitors who enjoy tactile, studio-style activities, the workshop offers a different way to engage with Montana’s maker culture.
Pepi’s Workshop sits in historic Red Lodge, a mountain town at the eastern gateway to the Beartooth Mountains. Red Lodge’s streets and storefronts reflect mining-era architecture and outdoor-first life; after a morning on the trail or a drive along the Beartooth Highway, this workshop is a calming, satisfying stop. The craft connects to regional traditions—western saddlery, pack leather used by generations of ranchers—and provides a tangible souvenir rooted in local practice.
The class is structured for beginners and young makers (ages 8+), so no prior experience is required. In about an hour you’ll complete a small project: a key fob, wallet, or card holder—choices vary. The pace is measured, and instructors demonstrate tool safety, dye application, and finishing so your piece will wear well. Small-group settings make instruction personal without feeling crowded.
Practical notes: durable clothing that can carry a faint dye stain is wise, and closed-toe shoes are recommended in the workshop. This is a low-impact, year-round indoor offering—perfect on a rainy afternoon or as a warm-up after a winter snowshoe. Pepi’s Workshop enriches the Red Lodge visitor circuit by preserving craft skill and providing a hands-on counterpoint to the region’s outdoor pursuits. For travelers seeking a local-made keepsake with an authentic story, this leathercrafting hour delivers technique, history, and a usable piece you’ll reach for often.
Bring a camera for detail shots of tooling and keep a notebook to record techniques you learn; visitors return to the shop months later seeking advice on leather conditioning and repair. The work you produce is practical: expect patina to deepen with use, and plan to treat vegetable-tanned leather with a light coat of conditioner after a few months. Whether you’re a traveler collecting durable souvenirs or a local trying a new craft, this hour-long session gives a clear, hands-on introduction that can spark longer-term interest.