Friday, November 6, 2009

Leather and Suede Care


Have you seen all the leather pieces available this fall and winter? Leather is a must have for fall/winter 2009. It is seen in gloves, jackets, coats, dresses, belts, and boots. Your leather purchases are investment pieces you will enjoy for years to come as long as it is cared for properly.

These general guidelines are from the Leather Apparel Association, a non-profit industry group of manufacturers, retailers, tanners, and cleaners. Following these simple steps will assure you years of pleasure from your leather pieces.

  1. To maintain the garment’s shape, store it on a broad hanger, not wire.
  2. If your garment becomes wet, air dry naturally.
  3. Wrinkles will hang out. If ironing is desired, cover the garment with a brown grocery sack and use the low setting. Do not ever use steam.
  4. Hems may be fixed with a tiny bit of rubber cement.
  5. Avoid spraying perfumes or hairsprays while wearing leather.
  6. Do not apply adhesive name badges or pins.
  7. Wipe away dust and dirt by rubbing lightly with a soft dry sponge or cloth. Brushes designed specifically for suede are also available. (Suede is leather finished by a special process originally applied to kid, whereby one side is buffed on an emery wheel to produce a napped, velvety surface).
  8. For ink stains rub gently with an art gum eraser.
  9. For grease spots sprinkle talc powder on the spot and allow it to remain for an hour or so to absorb the great or oil spot. Reapply if necessary, then shake garment or brush gently.
  10. Matching garments should be cleaned at the same time since a slight variation in color or texture may occur as a natural result of the cleaning process. The garment may shrink slightly, but will stretch again with wear.

Enjoy your leather garments. Wear them often. Life is too short to save anything for good.

2 comments:

Lisa Tener said...

This comes just in time. I finally bought myself leather boots that I love. Two questions. 1. what's the best thing to spray it with (least toxic but also to protect them best). and 2. One boot seems to slouch more than the other. They're supposed to be flexible where you can slouch them or have them go straight above the knee, but it seems one stays up and the other seems to ease on down after a few steps. I'm not sure why it does that but anything I could do it keep it up?

Anonymous said...

Hello good work please keep it up