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On Point Holsters

For leather I like Tucker Gunleather but there is a wait. When I was doing classes I had a variety of holsters for my students and kydex proved to be durable and economical. My daily carry is Kydex
I have been dealing with a small company named Stoner in Ohio. Great people to work with, great prices on holsters of excellant quality on par with the Tucker and Black Hills Leather I have had made, and wait times well I have never waited more than a couple weeks for one. I believe 3 was tops when they were backed up during Covid. I have three of thier holsters. I really like thier dual carry models strong side and cross draw for driving.


Wait four I have 4

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Some people don't like Craft Holster. I've got two of their paddle holsters for my Colt Defender lightweight, HK USP45, and Sig P220 carry and haven't had any problems with them. If you like leatherView attachment 69669
Have nothing against Craft holsters. I just found in this case holsters are one of the few things left where I can get a quality American made product at competitive prices to the foriegn made versions made in Slovakia. So I prefer to go to a small American shop like Stoner. And I had borrowed a craft holster to check thrm out for the Makarov and found the Stoner had a heavier weight leather which I preferred. The Craft holster was perfectly acceptable.
 
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I use Wright Leather Works for my off duty needs (real leather) and they are also an AMERICAN made company. Great people to deal with although it usually takes 6-8 weeks to get your product. Although lately albeit slowly getting into kydex holsters I found Muddy River Tactical (Thanks BASSBOB) and also Vedder Holsters from Florida. All great companies and all of em made right here. Just my two cents. But I'll give On Point a try. You can never have enough holsters, Lord knows I have a large box of em.
 
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This is the first that I've heard of On Point holsters. And I've got guns that they don't make holsters for.
The original post was about On Points kydex holsters , not leather like your Craft. And like any new small maker, if they do not have your model , keep looking back and they might.

Molded holsters require a blue gun to mold around generally. So new models require investment and odd or rarer models are usually later in the process. Usually the most popular gun models are picked first to bring in the highest rate of sales.
 
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On Point is a small veteran operated business. Chuck has been making holsters for around 10 years and they are quality holsters. As a small company without a big advertising budget they are not widely known. That is my whole point for mentioning them here. They are another option to consider.
 
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