Gary Reeder
Dave, I have designed several crossdraw
Saturday, January 24, 2026, 10:53

holsters and a couple of hip holsters. For everyday use not counting a time when you might be upside down for some kinky reason good crossdraw holster is hard to beat. For general use
my Yaqui belt slide holster just plain works. It slides on your belt horizontally and one holster will work for revolvers, autos, even scoped revolvers. I have one of them that I designed back in 1987 and it still works. They come in brown and black.
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Even for monster semi autos like the Auto Mag.
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In other situations a good crossdraw holster is hard to beat.
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I like a good lightweight shoulder holster mostly for autos, like the 1911.It holds an auto under one arm and an extra mag under the opposite arm or you can buy an extra holster and put it in place of the mag holster. This way you have 2 1911s or other semi autos.
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My newest holster is probably my favorite for heavy revolvers. The front of the barrel sits in a "cup" and a spring clamps around the cylinder and holds it in place. When you need it you simply pull it toward the front.
Al Goerg, the "father" of handgun hunting designed a shoulder holster back in the early 60s. It was designed for large revolvers. Al died in a place crash in 1965 but we still build the original Goerg holster.
[image] It has an ammo slide that hangs under the "off" arm.
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