Hello.
I got a German reefer type jacket - early to mid 20th Century, double breasted, mock belt on back, hip length. Variations were used as service jackets from WWI to the 1990s. Most here probably know the style.
I think the one I got was immediately post WWII production. Quality is as good as any I've seen, though. The reinforcement stitching of the collar is elaborate. There's actually an extra piece of leather there as extra reinforcement with lots of close stitching. The leather seems close to 2mm thick. The jacket weighs around 8 pounds.
Anyway, I got it from ebay and the seller claimed it had no smell. They lied. The dilemma is the jacket's great and fits perfectly and arrived in nearly deadstock condition.
I like buying vintage and have often been up to the challenge of removing smells. I've wiped out seemingly intractable mold smells on leather before. This jacket has only responded with qualified success.
Briefly, I tried a borax soak, a disinfectant soak, several laundry washes (though not with hot water since I didn't want to shrink the lining) and finally a couple sittings in an oven preheated to 500 degrees. I also used chemical based odor removers like Odors Away and Ozium, rubbing them into the leather by themselves and in solution with Neatsfoot Oil.
The mold is obviously dead. The smell is gone too - except when I'm wearing the jacket on a humid day and perspire. The moisture revives the smell of mold. I'm convinced the science behind this is similar to the way you can smell rain in the air - somehow the molecules of dead mold are borne by the humidity into the air immediately around the jacket.
I guess the question might be how to get residual dead mold out of the leather at a microscopic level?
Beats me.
Does anyone here know what I'm talking about?
Does anyone here have a remedy?
Thanks.
I got a German reefer type jacket - early to mid 20th Century, double breasted, mock belt on back, hip length. Variations were used as service jackets from WWI to the 1990s. Most here probably know the style.
I think the one I got was immediately post WWII production. Quality is as good as any I've seen, though. The reinforcement stitching of the collar is elaborate. There's actually an extra piece of leather there as extra reinforcement with lots of close stitching. The leather seems close to 2mm thick. The jacket weighs around 8 pounds.
Anyway, I got it from ebay and the seller claimed it had no smell. They lied. The dilemma is the jacket's great and fits perfectly and arrived in nearly deadstock condition.
I like buying vintage and have often been up to the challenge of removing smells. I've wiped out seemingly intractable mold smells on leather before. This jacket has only responded with qualified success.
Briefly, I tried a borax soak, a disinfectant soak, several laundry washes (though not with hot water since I didn't want to shrink the lining) and finally a couple sittings in an oven preheated to 500 degrees. I also used chemical based odor removers like Odors Away and Ozium, rubbing them into the leather by themselves and in solution with Neatsfoot Oil.
The mold is obviously dead. The smell is gone too - except when I'm wearing the jacket on a humid day and perspire. The moisture revives the smell of mold. I'm convinced the science behind this is similar to the way you can smell rain in the air - somehow the molecules of dead mold are borne by the humidity into the air immediately around the jacket.
I guess the question might be how to get residual dead mold out of the leather at a microscopic level?
Beats me.
Does anyone here know what I'm talking about?
Does anyone here have a remedy?
Thanks.