Studded Bag DIY: Customize Your Backpack or Purse

By HardCandySkull · April 5, 2026 · 6 min read

Nothing says "this is mine" like a custom studded bag. Whether it's a plain canvas backpack, a thrifted purse, or a basic tote, adding metal studs transforms it from forgettable to statement piece in 30 minutes.

Here's exactly how to do it.

Best Bags for Studding

Avoid: Nylon bags (studs won't hold), bags with internal frames (can't access the inside for prong bending), and anything with a coating that cracks.

Best Placement Areas on Bags

Step-by-Step: Studding a Canvas Backpack

  1. Empty the bag completely - Remove everything inside, including any internal dividers or laptop sleeves you can take out.
  2. Slide cardboard inside - Place a piece of thick cardboard behind the panel you're studding. This gives you a firm surface to push against and protects the back panel.
  3. Plan your design - Use chalk to mark stud placement. Start simple: a border around the pocket flap, or a diagonal line across the front.
  4. Push studs through - Place each stud face-down on a hard surface, position the canvas over the prongs, and press firmly.
  5. Bend the prongs - Reach inside the bag and use pliers to bend each prong flat against the interior fabric.
  6. Check comfort - Run your hand over the inside. If prongs are sharp, cover them with a strip of duct tape or iron-on interfacing.

Step-by-Step: Studding a Leather Purse

  1. Mark placement - Use chalk on the leather surface.
  2. Punch holes - Use a leather hole punch or rotary punch at each mark. The hole should be just big enough for the screw post.
  3. Insert the stud - Push the decorative front through from the outside.
  4. Screw on the backing - From inside the bag, screw the flat disc backing onto the post. Tighten firmly.
  5. Check alignment - Before tightening the last few, step back and look at the overall pattern. Adjust if needed.

Grab a Starter Kit

200 mixed studs, tools, and a beginner template. Perfect for your first bag project.

SHOP STARTER KITS →

Design Ideas

Frequently Asked Questions

How many studs do I need for a backpack?

For a front pocket flap accent, 20–50 studs. For scattered coverage across the whole bag, 50–150 depending on the bag size and spacing. For dense full coverage, 200+.

Can I stud a leather purse?

Yes, but use screw-back studs with a leather hole punch. Prong studs usually can't push through real leather. Faux leather purses work with either type.

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