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Vintage leather care opinions

So33

One of the Regulars
Messages
181
Location
Seattle
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So33

One of the Regulars
Messages
181
Location
Seattle
I may have posted this without text, picked up a 1930's leather jacket with patina galore. Leather on arms and wrists are dryer than body. I tried some Langlitz Treatment on inside of collar, see picture.
What worries me is the treatment applied on inside collar darkened the leather (see picture of collar) What I hope to achieve is saving patina with more luster and oil the leather. Is this possible? I'm thinking like what I saw on Mike Wolfes picker jacket after a season or two in transformation. Maybe that was television magic.
What are your thoughts and opinions?
 
Messages
11,376
Location
Alabama
I may have posted this without text, picked up a 1930's leather jacket with patina galore. Leather on arms and wrists are dryer than body. I tried some Langlitz Treatment on inside of collar, see picture.
What worries me is the treatment applied on inside collar darkened the leather (see picture of collar) What I hope to achieve is saving patina with more luster and oil the leather. Is this possible? I'm thinking like what I saw on Mike Wolfes picker jacket after a season or two in transformation. Maybe that was television magic.
What are your thoughts and opinions?

I have no experience with Langlitz but I've used gallons of Lexol and Bick 4 on everything from saddles and bridle leathers to custom cowboy boots and neither has ever darkened or discolored any leather from lighter colors to black.

I like that jacket.
 

robrinay

One Too Many
Messages
1,490
Location
Sheffield UK
Some leather treatments temporarily darken the leather but the leather lightens gradually as the treatment soaks in and evaporates from the top layer of the surface.
 
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Messages
16,842
I may have posted this without text, picked up a 1930's leather jacket with patina galore. Leather on arms and wrists are dryer than body. I tried some Langlitz Treatment on inside of collar, see picture.
What worries me is the treatment applied on inside collar darkened the leather (see picture of collar) What I hope to achieve is saving patina with more luster and oil the leather. Is this possible? I'm thinking like what I saw on Mike Wolfes picker jacket after a season or two in transformation. Maybe that was television magic.
What are your thoughts and opinions?

I'd use Lexol on this and a lot of it. It should have any profound effect on the patina or the character. Any leather conditioner will darken the leather at first, of course but once it gets soaked in and the surface dries up, the jacket should revert to its original colour. It's a beautiful jacket but at this point I'd be more concerned to preserve the leather from drying up and cracking, than about color.

Sadly, leather conditioners don't seem to have any significant long term effect. I prefer silicone based conditioners (which is what Langlitz conditioner is, I believe) but majority of people seem to be against it, so... I don't know. Though so far I've gotten best results with it. Lexol is good too because the jacket easily soaks it up.
 

Carlos840

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,944
Location
London
I have used Lexol and Pecard and my favourite combo is Lexol cleaner followed by Pecard vintage leather dressing.
Like people have said previously, its normal for conditioner to darken the leather at first, but it should be back to normal within a day or so.
 

ShadowBoxer

Familiar Face
Messages
58
Location
Los Angeles, California
Hi,

I'm new here and not any kind of an expert.
However I am also currently trying to save a special jacket (one of the reasons I found Fedora Lounge).
I may have posted this without text, picked up a 1930's leather jacket with patina galore. Leather on arms and wrists are dryer than body. I tried some Langlitz Treatment on inside of collar, see picture.
What worries me is the treatment applied on inside collar darkened the leather (see picture of collar) What I hope to achieve is saving patina with more luster and oil the leather. Is this possible? I'm thinking like what I saw on Mike Wolfes picker jacket after a season or two in transformation. Maybe that was television magic.
What are your thoughts and opinions?
Since the jacket I'm working on is a Langlitz and I was given some Langlitz Leather dressing before, after much back-and-forth and indecision I decided to "risk it" and just go with the manufacturer's suggested product.

My jacket is in worse condition than yours. Multiple cracks and peeling/flaking of the surfaces, breaks where the super dry leather was mistreated, etc. Interestingly (maybe a coincidence), the sleeves are also the worst. The front and back torso panels have some damage and cracking but are basically just old and dry.

I think what you are asking is if you can have it old & distressed but new & fresh but not change anything. If you want to wear the jacket, I would say this is not what you should be aiming for. I assume you are not trying to save this for a museum or something. You intend to wear it.

As soon as you start treating the leather, you are changing it.
That's okay because you are trying to preserve it. When I put the Langlitz Leather dressing on my jacket it darkened the colored part a bit and darkened the exposed, worn leather parts a lot more. However after a day or two the surfaces all dried or are still drying back to their original colors (or close enough for me).

As Monitor said, I would be a lot more concerned with preservation than changing the tone. If you can save the jacket and enjoy wearing it (now safely that won't cause further damage) you won't care if it's a little darker. When people complement you on it, you won't say, "Yeah, but it used to be a lot dryer and more scuffed up looking..." You will simply wear it and enjoy it.
I'd use Lexol on this and a lot of it. It should have any profound effect on the patina or the character. Any leather conditioner will darken the leather at first, of course but once it gets soaked in and the surface dries up, the jacket should revert to its original colour. It's a beautiful jacket but at this point I'd be more concerned to preserve the leather from drying up and cracking, than about color.

Sadly, leather conditioners don't seem to have any significant long term effect. I prefer silicone based conditioners (which is what Langlitz conditioner is, I believe) but majority of people seem to be against it, so... I don't know. Though so far I've gotten best results with it. Lexol is good too because the jacket easily soaks it up.

So I'd say apply the Langlitz dressing in thin coats, multiple times and let it dry for a few hours or over night. I put on a lot because thin coats were drying so fast I lost track of what I had done. By the time I shifted the jacket around to do another part, what I'd just done had absorbed the conditioner and was bone dry again! You probably won't have that problem.

On mine, when it was still "damp" from the night before I left it alone. By the second day, the leather felt dry/normal again with nothing transferring to my hands. Some parts are beginning to feel more normal, some parts go back to feeling like paper. I apply thin coats now.

Good luck with your project.
 

Seb Lucas

I'll Lock Up
Messages
7,562
Location
Australia
I may have posted this without text, picked up a 1930's leather jacket with patina galore. Leather on arms and wrists are dryer than body. I tried some Langlitz Treatment on inside of collar, see picture.
What worries me is the treatment applied on inside collar darkened the leather (see picture of collar) What I hope to achieve is saving patina with more luster and oil the leather. Is this possible? I'm thinking like what I saw on Mike Wolfes picker jacket after a season or two in transformation. Maybe that was television magic.
What are your thoughts and opinions?

If you're thinking about Mr Wolfe's 1940's 3/4 jacket with the half-belt - that one had so much rot it was falling apart.

My take on conditioners after using them for 3 decades now is that they don't do much. They certainly create the impression of an improved hide by temporarily putting some moisture back and covering up the rough spots and producing a shine or improved surface look. But like make up, it's a superficial change. It wipes and evaporates away.

Or maybe it's more like a car re-spray - where the rust starts to come through again after a while. Dressings might have a preventative function to protect leather before it gets bad, but my experience with older jackets using Pecards and Lexol is that the improved effect is temporary.

I spoke to the senior curator at the Smithsonian a few years ago and she advised that they do not use any Pecards or commercial leather dressing and that leather conservation is really about the careful use of light and air/moisture regulation.
 
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Jeremiah

A-List Customer
Messages
368
Location
Montana
Not "ALL" leather conditioners will darken leather. I use Eastman liquid leather. It will not darken and makes the leather feel soft and smell wonderful. Leather should not be conditioned regularly. Perhaps the only exception is if you say have a pair of boots that are regularly exposed to water and drying from say wet grass. One should condition a little more regularly in this case. Before the boot is completely dry is preferable.
 

So33

One of the Regulars
Messages
181
Location
Seattle
I went with what I had on hand and used the Langlitz conditioner. Here's the results. It's darkened the color and softened the leather. I'll post up in a month or two to show how it effects the leather. By then the buttons will match and have new pocket liners made.
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