cottontop
Members-
Content Count
24 -
Joined
-
Last visited
About cottontop
-
Rank
Member
Profile Information
-
Location
Townsend, Tennessee
-
Interests
Watch collecting, fly fishing, watching baseball and hockey
LW Info
-
Leatherwork Specialty
Watch straps
-
Interested in learning about
various tools
-
How did you find leatherworker.net?
google
Recent Profile Visitors
The recent visitors block is disabled and is not being shown to other users.
-
I agree with much of what you said, however, I will have to respectfully disagree about buying (shoes and boots included) on line. If people did not buy on line (shoes and boots included) then this very forum would suffer and might even cease to exist. I would love to be able to visit various stores in person and shop for shoes and other things, but from where I live, in the middle of the Smoky Mountains of east Tennessee in the USA, I am many miles from good stores that have any kind of expansive ( yes, expansive, not expensive) inventory of decent shoes and boots in stock. That leaves on line shopping as my main option and i feel that on line shopping is a real blessing. I have bought lots of shoes and boots on line and this is the first time I bought shoes that did not fit, but I knew going in that these might not fit so I took a chance anyway. BTW, I just found a pair exactly like the ones that caused me to initiate this thread in a size and a half larger that will work so I ordered those. Anyway, thanks for your comments, they are appreciated.
-
I took the shoes to the local cobbler and a week later I got them back. They were stretched out some, but still too small. I was afraid of that. Lesson learned. I will pay more attention to sizes; i.e., EU to U.S., men's to women's, etc. from now on. I'm sending them to my daughter in Florida. Being that the shoes are unisex, they should work for her. If she doesn't want them, they will go to the blessing box.
-
Darkening Leather Boots/Shoes
cottontop replied to cottontop's topic in Shoes, Boots, Sandals and Moccassins
Thanks for the positive comments SUP. I do appreciate it. -
Darkening Leather Boots/Shoes
cottontop replied to cottontop's topic in Shoes, Boots, Sandals and Moccassins
I'm trying to upload a little larger photo. Hope it works. -
Darkening Leather Boots/Shoes
cottontop replied to cottontop's topic in Shoes, Boots, Sandals and Moccassins
I tried to upload another photo of the above shoe, but the "choose files" thing says my photo is to many MB's or something so i will have to settle on the one above. In the photo, the dark portion of the shoe looks almost black, but it is really a nice dark brown. This is a before the coloring job photo. -
Darkening Leather Boots/Shoes
cottontop replied to cottontop's topic in Shoes, Boots, Sandals and Moccassins
Here is a photo of the end result of dying a portion of this pair of shoes with Startso Dark Brown Balm in order to have contrasting colors in the shoe. The photos are not great (I am not a very good photographer) but I think you can get the idea. -
Darkening Leather Boots/Shoes
cottontop replied to cottontop's topic in Shoes, Boots, Sandals and Moccassins
I just received my jar of Startso Leather Balm, dark brown. This stuff is very easy to use. It is also water soluble so easy clean up. I used it to darken the "saddle" area of a pair of shoes that were all one color of a light tan. The contrast of the two parts of the shoe looks great to me. I used plain old masking tape to protect the areas where I did not want the balm to reach. For me, I can't see using any other method. However, if you are a professional cobbler and have the products and the experience and are coloring shoes for a paying customer, then I can see the need to dye the shoes using the acetone and whatever other stuff a cobbler would use to do a professional long lasting job. But, the Startso worked for me yet YMMV. Will post a photo later today. -
Anyone ever use Scotchgard spray on boots or shoes? It says it is a protector for leather, suede and nubuck. Does it actually repel water? Does it change the color of the leather? Does it make lighter colored leather darker? Just wondering what others experiences might have been when using this product. If it lives up to the claims made on the can, I just might give it a try.
-
Darkening Leather Boots/Shoes
cottontop replied to cottontop's topic in Shoes, Boots, Sandals and Moccassins
Do you mean leather dyes and treatments? -
Darkening Leather Boots/Shoes
cottontop replied to cottontop's topic in Shoes, Boots, Sandals and Moccassins
I am not really looking for a variation in a shade. I just want to darken a couple of small sections on a couple of shoes. As long as there is a contrast between sections of the shoe, I am happy. Notice the second photo I posted earlier of the Jim Green vellie shoe. I achieved a slight contrast with just an application of Cobbler's Choice Cream. The Startso Leather Balm should darken the leather even more and a contrast either slight or not so slight is what I am after. -
Darkening Leather Boots/Shoes
cottontop replied to cottontop's topic in Shoes, Boots, Sandals and Moccassins
Thanks for your comments SUP. I am one who does not want to get into leather dyeing. The whole "dyeing" process sounds way too involved and messy to me for what I want to do. If I was a pro and doing something like this for the general public, it would be a different story; but I am not a pro and i am only doing this for little old me. Like we say on the Banjo Hangout Forum, "It's your banjo, play it any way you want." BTW, if you go to Amazon and look up the Startso World Leather Balm, the description states that it is a DYE, and "Restores new life into old worn leather." -
Darkening Leather Boots/Shoes
cottontop replied to cottontop's topic in Shoes, Boots, Sandals and Moccassins
There is the old saying, "There is more than one way to skin a cat." What is "properly" to some may not be "properly" to others. -
Darkening Leather Boots/Shoes
cottontop replied to cottontop's topic in Shoes, Boots, Sandals and Moccassins
Here is one pair of the shoes in question. Thanks for the responses. As I stated in my OP, I don't want this to be a complicated project; just a wipe on wipe off affair. Using a stripper and dye seems to be a complicated process, at least for me. This conversion does not have to be permanent as I can always paste it again if the new color starts to fade. In the second photo, the side panels were darkened slightly with Cobblers Choice conditioning cream and it provided a slight contrast which is what I was after with these shoes. Of course light brown (or tan) colored shoes are much easier to darken. Amazon has a product called Startso World Leather & Vinyl Recoloring Balm, dark brown. I think I will give that a try. It will either work or it won't. Joe -
What is a product that when applied by hand will make brown shoes a darker shade of brown? I have tried Mink Oil, and it darkened the shoes slightly, but not dark enough. What I really want to do is this: I have some shoes that are various shades of brown and are all one color. I would like to darken just the side or saddle panels a darker shade of brown so that the shoes become a sort of two tone, or really, two shades of contrasting brown on the same shoe. On some of them the toe section is a separate piece of leather and I would like to darken that section also and thus match the side panels. I might not be using the correct terminology for the shoe parts so i hope you can understand what I mean. You could say that I want to do it the easy way, i.e.; wipe it on, let it dry or soak in for a while, polish it off, and done. Any suggestions will be appreciated. Joe
-
Tastech, will post some photos after the shoes arrive. Thanks for your comments. Joe