We put a lot of work into the finish of your oars. One row without leathers and your bronze oarlocks will eat right through the varnish. Our leather kit, for sewing on your own leathers, has the finest materials available on the market.
Our kit includes a piece of 5/6 oz traditional harness leather at 5/64" x 10" x 14", leather button stock, needles, waxed dacron thread, and instructions. You will need to have a utility knife, something to punch out the holes with (awl or 3/32 leather punch), and contact cement (any brand).
One kit is for sewing leathers on a pair of oars.
Our History
While technically founded in 1858, this hand painted sign dug up from the archives shows that the company was actually doing business two years before that. Either way, we're still the second oldest manufacturer of marine products in the United States today.
From our simple workshop on the banks of the Penobscot River, we still employ time-honored manufacturing traditions. Here, a long time Shaw & Tenney craftsman sculpts an oar on a drum sander that’s more than 100 years old.
Our oars and paddles are all made to order right here, in our Orono, Maine workshop. Meticulously hand sewing oar leathers takes years (and years) of practice.
We’ve been dipping our paddles the same way for over 100 years. Of course there are probably easier ways to do it, but we’re convinced there’s no better.