FredS
One of the Regulars
- Messages
- 148
- Location
- The Netherlands
I ordered a jacket in Horween Chromexell Black Steer and received a sample of this leather. What worries me is that although it is aniline dyed it is done so by hand (hand-rubbed) and not in vats with the result that the dye is only a thin layer on the top and not right through the hide. In vat dyed aniline hides the hide has been dyed all the way through with the same color thus the hide is the same color on both the front and back.
I took a blunt knife and lightly scraped over the surface of the sample piece of leather and with minimal effort it scrapes off the black top layer of dye exposing a chocolate brown color underneath. The suede side of the leather is also this chocolate brown color. So my worries are that this Horweens Chromexell Black Steer will scratch and scuff very easily damaging the black color and will look ugly very quickly with the chocolate brown color being exposed so easily. I wanted a jacket with a leather where the dye goes right through the entire hide and with most aniline dyes this is the case except with Horween's it seems.
Are my worries justified? Does anyone have any experience with their jackets made of Horweens Chromexel Black Steer or Brown Steer where the issue that I worry about has manifested itself?
I don't understand why Horweens Chromexell is so highly rated then if the dye is only a thin coating on the top that wears off so easily instead of being dyed right through. Dyed right through would surely be indicative of much better quality surely and would ensure that the jacket remains the original color it was dyed in.
I took a blunt knife and lightly scraped over the surface of the sample piece of leather and with minimal effort it scrapes off the black top layer of dye exposing a chocolate brown color underneath. The suede side of the leather is also this chocolate brown color. So my worries are that this Horweens Chromexell Black Steer will scratch and scuff very easily damaging the black color and will look ugly very quickly with the chocolate brown color being exposed so easily. I wanted a jacket with a leather where the dye goes right through the entire hide and with most aniline dyes this is the case except with Horween's it seems.
Are my worries justified? Does anyone have any experience with their jackets made of Horweens Chromexel Black Steer or Brown Steer where the issue that I worry about has manifested itself?
I don't understand why Horweens Chromexell is so highly rated then if the dye is only a thin coating on the top that wears off so easily instead of being dyed right through. Dyed right through would surely be indicative of much better quality surely and would ensure that the jacket remains the original color it was dyed in.
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