Want to buy or sell something? Check the classifieds
  • The Fedora Lounge is supported in part by commission earning affiliate links sitewide. Please support us by using them. You may learn more here.

Will soaking Cr- tanned leather jackets with hot water ruin the jacket?

high-maintenance

One of the Regulars
Messages
214
Hi

Do you guys have any experience in soaking the leather jacket in hot water? (of course not boiling hot) (tap water hot)

Will this ruin the jacket? or will it release toxic chemicals? (I read hexavalent chromium can be harmful)

I have a jacket that is now too big for me so I want it to shrink a bit.

Any tips would be appreciated. Thanks!
 

TooManyHatsOnlyOneHead

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,286
Do it all the time. What's going to shrink it is heat when drying. Hot water on leather, I wouldn't suggest. You might scorch it. But you want to get the leather soaking wet and then either bright, hot sunny day outside or stick in dryer.

Warning, due at your own risk. I've done like at least 6 jackets that needed a little shrink. All of them turn out great, but you really got to watch it in the dryer. Check every 10 minutes kind of thing. I'd keep zipped up too so hopefully the shrink in the torso is uniform.

If you need to shrink like a full size or something, I wouldn't recommend. The liner is going to get all messed up and possibly sag and the zipper gets wavy. You also need to condition afterwards if it's in the dryer long time (I'd say more than 20-30 minutes), but make sure fully dry before you do it. You don't want to seal in the water in the leather if you're using some sort of wax based, etc. Keep in mind that conditioner will make it expand some.

I just did a Schott cross zip I had because it was fitting a little wide and long. Hosed it down flat on the ground (otherwise water just runs down and the bottom will get soaked but not the rest) and let the water seep in. You can spin cycle it so it's not overly saturated, but you want to make sure the jacket is completely wet otherwise you risk mismatch sizing.

I went probably like 10 minutes too long and I got a small overall wave in the zipper line but it's fine. I was trying to give it a more weathered look anyway. I might hit it with some extra conditioner tomorrow to see if I can sort of spot correct it along the zipper line but try and keep the shrinking in.
 

Seb Lucas

I'll Lock Up
Messages
7,562
Location
Australia
No hot water. Luke warm is ok but really the shrinking comes when you dry it fast in a dryer. But this is not a science and you can end up with uneven shrinkage - too short in the sleeves but no difference in the width. I've washed many jackets and always dry them over several days in the shade. Never had shrinkage.
 

Peacoat

*
Bartender
Messages
6,454
Location
South of Nashville
I had a vegetable tanned generic MC jacket that was a little too big for me after I lost some weight. Soaked it in warm water in the bathtub and let it slowly dry over a day or so. Worked a treat and shrank down to a good fit. When it was dry, I put a coat of Pecard on it. Turned out nice and supple, just the way it was before. That was 15 years or so ago, and it's still going strong.
 

marker2037

Practically Family
Messages
834
Location
Curacao/NJ, USA
Do it all the time. What's going to shrink it is heat when drying. Hot water on leather, I wouldn't suggest. You might scorch it. But you want to get the leather soaking wet and then either bright, hot sunny day outside or stick in dryer.

Warning, due at your own risk. I've done like at least 6 jackets that needed a little shrink. All of them turn out great, but you really got to watch it in the dryer. Check every 10 minutes kind of thing. I'd keep zipped up too so hopefully the shrink in the torso is uniform.

If you need to shrink like a full size or something, I wouldn't recommend. The liner is going to get all messed up and possibly sag and the zipper gets wavy. You also need to condition afterwards if it's in the dryer long time (I'd say more than 20-30 minutes), but make sure fully dry before you do it. You don't want to seal in the water in the leather if you're using some sort of wax based, etc. Keep in mind that conditioner will make it expand some.

I just did a Schott cross zip I had because it was fitting a little wide and long. Hosed it down flat on the ground (otherwise water just runs down and the bottom will get soaked but not the rest) and let the water seep in. You can spin cycle it so it's not overly saturated, but you want to make sure the jacket is completely wet otherwise you risk mismatch sizing.

I went probably like 10 minutes too long and I got a small overall wave in the zipper line but it's fine. I was trying to give it a more weathered look anyway. I might hit it with some extra conditioner tomorrow to see if I can sort of spot correct it along the zipper line but try and keep the shrinking in.
The biggest threat to putting a jacket in the dryer is the liner and zipper fabric shrinking. That's why you could get a wavy zipper.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
109,253
Messages
3,077,337
Members
54,183
Latest member
UrbanGraveDave
Top