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Making Hide Glue by Boiling Rawhide Scraps — Prehistoric Collagen Adhesive
Bob

أنشأه

Bob

15. مايو 2026BE
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Making Hide Glue by Boiling Rawhide Scraps — Prehistoric Collagen Adhesive

Hide glue is one of humanity's earliest synthetic adhesives, produced by extracting collagen protein from animal skins, tendons, and connective tissue through sustained boiling. While birch tar (made by pyrolysis) predates it, hide glue offered a different and complementary set of properties: it is water-soluble when warm, sets rigid when cool, and bonds porous materials like wood, bone, and leather with exceptional strength. Archaeological evidence of hide glue use dates back to at least the Middle Stone Age. The collagen in animal hides breaks down into gelatin when heated in water above 70 degrees Celsius — the resulting sticky liquid dries to form a hard, transparent film that can be reactivated with warmth and moisture. This made hide glue ideal for hafting stone tools, attaching feathers to arrow shafts, sealing bark containers, and joining wooden components. This blueprint teaches the hot stone boiling method for making hide glue — the technique used before pottery made direct-fire boiling possible.
متوسط
3-4 hours

التعليمات

1

Collect Rawhide Scraps and Trimmings

Gather leftover pieces of rawhide from hide processing — ears, lips, tail, hoof edges, and any trimmings from brain tanning. Fresh scraps work best. If using dried rawhide, soak in water overnight until fully rehydrated and pliable.

المواد لهذه الخطوة:

Raw HideRaw Hide500 غ
2

Cut Rawhide into Small Pieces

Cut the rawhide into strips or squares no larger than 3 cm across. Smaller pieces expose more surface area to the hot water, allowing collagen to dissolve faster. Use a sharp flint blade — rawhide is tough and resists tearing.

الأدوات المطلوبة:

Flint KnifeFlint Knife
3

Wash the Rawhide Pieces

Rinse the cut rawhide thoroughly in clean water to remove dirt, blood, and fat residue. Fat contamination weakens the final glue by preventing collagen strands from bonding properly. Squeeze and agitate the pieces in water until it runs clear.

المواد لهذه الخطوة:

Clean WaterClean Water2 لترات
4

Prepare a Bark Container for Boiling

Set up a bark container or hide-lined pit filled with approximately 2 litres of clean water. The rawhide pieces must be fully submerged with at least 5 cm of water above them. Place the container near the fire for easy stone transfer.

المواد لهذه الخطوة:

Birch Bark SheetsBirch Bark Sheets1 قطعة
Clean WaterClean Water2 لترات
5

Add Rawhide Pieces to the Water

Place all the washed rawhide pieces into the water-filled container. Push them below the surface. They will float initially but should sink as they absorb water. The water-to-rawhide ratio should be approximately 4 to 1 by volume.
6

Heat Stones in the Fire

Place 8 to 10 dense, non-porous river stones into a strong hardwood fire. Heat for at least 25 minutes until the stones glow dull red. Use the same stone selection criteria as standard stone boiling — avoid sandstone and any layered or cracked rocks.

المواد لهذه الخطوة:

Smooth StoneSmooth Stone10 قطع
7

Begin Stone Boiling the Rawhide

Transfer heated stones into the bark container using green wood tongs. The water will boil violently on contact. Maintain a sustained simmer — not a rolling boil — by rotating stones steadily. Collagen extracts best between 70 and 85 degrees Celsius.
8

Maintain the Simmer for 2 to 3 Hours

Continue rotating hot stones in and out of the container for 2 to 3 hours. The rawhide pieces will gradually soften, swell, and begin dissolving. The water will thicken and turn cloudy, then amber-coloured as collagen leaches into solution.
9

Stir Occasionally with a Stick

Use a clean wooden stick to stir the mixture every 15 minutes, breaking apart softened rawhide pieces. Scrape any material clinging to the stones before removing them. Stirring ensures even heat distribution and maximum collagen extraction.
10

Test the Glue Consistency

Dip a stick into the liquid and lift it out. If the liquid drips in a thin, continuous stream and feels tacky between your fingers when cooled, the collagen concentration is sufficient. If it drips like plain water, continue boiling to reduce and concentrate the solution.
11

Strain Out Solid Remnants

Remove all stones from the liquid. Pour the glue solution through a bundle of grass or plant fibers stretched over a second container to filter out undissolved rawhide fragments. The strained liquid should be a clear amber colour with the viscosity of warm honey.
12

Reduce the Glue to Working Strength

If the filtered liquid is still too thin, continue gentle stone boiling to evaporate excess water. The finished glue should coat a stick thickly and feel strongly tacky when a drop is tested between finger and thumb after 10 seconds of cooling.
13

Apply the Warm Glue Immediately

Hide glue must be applied warm — it gels and loses adhesion as it cools below 30 degrees Celsius. Brush or drip the warm liquid glue onto the surfaces to be joined, press them firmly together, and hold in place until the glue sets. Full strength develops as the glue dries completely over 12 to 24 hours.
14

Store Excess Glue as Dried Cakes

Pour unused glue onto a flat stone or bark sheet in a thin layer and let it dry completely in warm air. The dried glue forms hard, translucent amber cakes that store indefinitely. To reuse, break off a piece, add a small amount of warm water, and reheat by stone boiling until liquid again.

المواد لهذه الخطوة:

Flat Stone SlabFlat Stone Slab1 قطعة

المواد

5

الأدوات المطلوبة

1

مواد المخططات المرتبطة

CC0 ملكية عامة

هذا المخطط مُصدر بموجب CC0. يحق لك نسخه وتعديله وتوزيعه واستخدامه لأي غرض، دون طلب إذن.

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