That is why this roundup separates the kits by job instead of treating them as one pile of similar tools. Some are better for a first starter box. Some are better when you want a calmer, smaller setup. Others give you more motif range for borders, filler work, and repeated practice. If your bench is tight, a compact kit can be the smarter answer. If you have room to organize, a larger assortment pays back in flexibility.

The Picks in Brief

Pick Best for Why it fits Watch out
Cohas Leathercraft Stamping Tool Set, 110 Piece Broad starter assortment 110 pieces give the widest spread in this roundup More pieces mean more sorting
Tandy Leather 5171-00 Basic Tooling Set Simple first tooling kit Keeps the first sessions focused on essentials Less range than the larger assortments
Beadalon Leather Stamping Tool Kit, 60 Piece Quick projects and practice 60 pieces are easier to keep close at hand Can feel tight for border-heavy work
Alilang Leathercraft Tooling Stamp Set, 100 Piece Mid-size variety 100 pieces give a good mix without going all the way up Extra options still need organization
Amart Leather Tooling Stamps Set, 120 Piece Largest assortment 120 pieces suit repeated layouts and practice Highest sorting and storage load

If you want the cleanest one-box answer, Cohas leads because it gives the broadest starter spread without pushing the setup into specialty territory. If you want less clutter, the smaller kits are easier to live with. If you want more pattern range, Alilang and Amart give you that room.

Cohas Leathercraft Stamping Tool Set, 110 Piece

The Cohas Leathercraft Stamping Tool Set, 110 Piece is the strongest all-around pick for a budget leather workbench. It gives you the broadest starter spread in this roundup, which matters when one kit has to cover practice sessions, small gifts, and a few different project styles. If you are still building your confidence with leather stamping, a larger assortment helps you move from one motif to another without feeling boxed in.

This set makes the most sense for a buyer who wants one purchase to do a lot of different work. It is a good fit for small leather goods, border accents, and pattern practice because there is enough variety to keep the kit from feeling repetitive too quickly. That range is also its main advantage over the smaller boxes: you are less likely to hit the point where every project starts to look the same.

The trade-off is organization. A 110-piece set asks for more order than a lean starter kit. If your bench is already crowded, this set needs a tray, drawer, or labeled organizer to stay easy to use. Choose something smaller if you know you prefer a faster reset at the end of a session.

Choose Cohas when you want the best balance of breadth and budget. Choose Beadalon if you want a smaller box you can keep within arm’s reach. Choose Tandy if you want the simplest first step.

Tandy Leather 5171-00 Basic Tooling Set

The Tandy Leather 5171-00 Basic Tooling Set is the calm choice in this roundup. It works well for someone who wants to learn spacing, placement, and the basic rhythm of stamping without starting with a large pile of pieces. That makes it especially useful for a first-time buyer or for a maker who wants a second set that stays simple and predictable.

Its appeal is not volume. Its appeal is focus. A basic tooling set keeps the number of decisions low, which can be a real advantage when you are learning how much pressure to use, how close to place stamps, and how to keep a design aligned. For a lot of beginners, that smaller mental load is more helpful than having a bigger assortment right away.

The limitation is plain: basic does not mean broad. If you already know you want more border options, more filler shapes, or a wider range of decorative motifs, this is not the kit that gives you the most room to grow. It is better for clean practice and simple layouts than for a bench that needs many different looks.

Choose Tandy if you want a steady entry point and less clutter on the bench. Choose Cohas if you want a fuller starter spread. Choose Alilang if you want more variety without going to the largest box.

Beadalon Leather Stamping Tool Kit, 60 Piece

The Beadalon Leather Stamping Tool Kit, 60 Piece is the easiest kit to keep under control when you do not want a lot of extra pieces on the bench. It suits small, quick jobs: a wallet accent, a key fob, a short strap detail, or practice work that you want to finish and put away without sorting through a large assortment.

The strength of a 60-piece kit is speed. Fewer pieces make the set easier to organize, faster to reset, and less demanding on a compact workspace. If your leathercraft time happens between other tasks, that lower friction matters. You can get to the work sooner and put it away sooner.

The trade-off is range. Once a project asks for more border variety or more texture choices, a 60-piece set can start to feel tight. You may be able to do the job, but you will have fewer options on hand and less room to experiment. That is why this kit works best for focused projects rather than broad pattern building.

Choose Beadalon if your bench is small or your sessions are short. Choose Cohas if you want more motifs to grow into. Choose Amart if you already know you will use a larger assortment often enough to keep it organized.

Alilang Leathercraft Tooling Stamp Set, 100 Piece

The Alilang Leathercraft Tooling Stamp Set, 100 Piece sits in the middle of the pack and that is exactly why it is useful. It gives you a lot more room to work than a small starter kit, but it does not push all the way into the biggest assortment here. For a buyer who wants more texture choices, more border options, and more room for repeat patterns, that middle ground can be the sweet spot.

This kit is a strong fit for someone who likes making a few different kinds of leather items and wants the stamping set to stay versatile. A hundred pieces is enough to support experimentation without making the kit feel unwieldy on day one. If you stamp enough to care about having choices, but not so much that you want the largest possible box, this is a practical middle path.

The catch is that more options need more order. Once a set gets this large, loose storage turns it from a helpful box into a drawer full of noise. If you are not planning to keep the stamps grouped and easy to find, a smaller kit will be easier to use well.

Choose Alilang if you want a better range than a beginner box but do not need the biggest set. Choose Beadalon if you want less sorting. Choose Amart if you want the biggest assortment and are ready to manage it.

Amart Leather Tooling Stamps Set, 120 Piece

The Amart Leather Tooling Stamps Set, 120 Piece is the largest assortment in this roundup, and that is its biggest reason to exist. It fits best when you batch projects, repeat the same layout on several pieces, or want the most room for practice and pattern exploration. If you like testing different accents on the same kind of project, a larger box gives you more ways to do that without repeating the same stamp over and over.

This is the pick for a maker who already knows that variety matters. A 120-piece set can support a lot of different small jobs, and it gives you the most options when you are trying to build a repeatable style across multiple pieces. That can be very helpful if your leathercraft routine includes several gifts, matching accessories, or practice runs on scrap.

The trade-off is the one that comes with every large assortment: it asks for discipline. More pieces are only helpful when they go back where they belong. Without a good organizer, the extra count becomes a sorting job instead of an advantage. If you do not want that amount of upkeep, one of the smaller sets will feel easier.

Choose Amart when you want the broadest assortment and you are willing to keep it organized. Choose Cohas if you want a slightly smaller set with similar reach. Choose Beadalon if storage is the bigger concern.

How to Choose Between Them on a Real Workbench

The easiest way to decide is to match the kit to the way you actually use your bench.

The bigger lesson here is that piece count only helps when the set stays easy to reach. A large kit with no organizer can become slower to use than a smaller box that lives neatly beside your cutting mat. For leather stamping, convenience is part of the value.

When to Skip a Mixed Stamp Kit

A mixed kit is not the right answer for every leather job. Skip this kind of set if you already know you need one exact letter, number, or monogram. A dedicated alphabet or number set solves that job better than a mixed assortment.

Skip a mixed kit if your leather setup is still missing the basics for stamping day. A stable striking surface and a simple way to store stamps matter more than having the biggest count on the box. If the bench is too crowded for one more tray, the smaller kit will usually get used more often.

Skip it too if you are building toward a very specific style and only want a few motifs. In that case, a smaller tooling set or a specialty stamp is easier to live with than a large group of pieces you will never reach for.

Final Verdict

If you want one clear answer, start with the Cohas Leathercraft Stamping Tool Set, 110 Piece. It gives the strongest balance of range and manageability for a budget workbench, which is exactly what most buyers need from a leather stamping kit in this price range.

If you want the simplest setup, the Tandy Leather 5171-00 Basic Tooling Set keeps the first steps straightforward. If your bench is small or your projects are quick, the Beadalon Leather Stamping Tool Kit, 60 Piece is easier to manage. If you want a middle ground with more variety, the Alilang Leathercraft Tooling Stamp Set, 100 Piece is a strong step up. If you want the biggest assortment and you are ready to keep it organized, the Amart Leather Tooling Stamps Set, 120 Piece is the largest option here.

The short version is simple: buy the set that matches the way you actually work, not the one that looks biggest in the box.