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I have learned that each type of leather responds differently to differnt handling, care and treatment.
And that deerskin rebels against just about any standard practice!
I have a pair of very nice unlined dress deerskin gloves from LL Bean. They began life a few years ago as a beautiful tan. The reminded me of the gloves one sees in Esquire illustrations. Great stuff. A slight pebble grain, beautiful stitching.
But over time (not much time) they got soiled from handling keys, coins, steering wheels, luggage, etc. Soiled enough to take action.
And, panicking at the result, another action. Eeek. Another action, and another, trying to get them "right."
Just about anything you might use to clean or moisturize deerskin will make it gummy, sticky and a mess. They are, after beeing glopped up with every leather preparation known to man, pretty much ruined.
Anyone have any magic for caring for deerskin leather? Please share and spare some other poor sot my sordid fate.
And that deerskin rebels against just about any standard practice!
I have a pair of very nice unlined dress deerskin gloves from LL Bean. They began life a few years ago as a beautiful tan. The reminded me of the gloves one sees in Esquire illustrations. Great stuff. A slight pebble grain, beautiful stitching.
But over time (not much time) they got soiled from handling keys, coins, steering wheels, luggage, etc. Soiled enough to take action.
And, panicking at the result, another action. Eeek. Another action, and another, trying to get them "right."
Just about anything you might use to clean or moisturize deerskin will make it gummy, sticky and a mess. They are, after beeing glopped up with every leather preparation known to man, pretty much ruined.
Anyone have any magic for caring for deerskin leather? Please share and spare some other poor sot my sordid fate.