Members Cactusman Posted October 22, 2022 Members Report Posted October 22, 2022 (edited) I am finished tooling a piece and want it to be durable and long lasting. Thinking of going a route of oil, sealer (TanKote), antiquing, sealer so it can be oiled/maintained better. Leather if very light color and want to maintain highest contrast between leather and antiquing. What oil works best and has least darkening properties? In past I dye, seal, antique, and seal. Worried that leather will not hold up as jacket patches, bag faces, etc. Appreciate any advice, David Edited October 22, 2022 by Cactusman Quote
Members Gezzer Posted October 22, 2022 Members Report Posted October 22, 2022 (edited) If I am understanding you right .. no dye just oil for color and resist , antique and sealer ? I used olive oil with that process on this one . I'm sure there are other options this is just what I do . Edited October 22, 2022 by Gezzer wrong picture Quote
Members johnnydb Posted October 22, 2022 Members Report Posted October 22, 2022 Neatsfoot oil is fine... If you want a shade of color in the oil just add less than 5% of the oil volume with Fiebings REGULAR dye....not the pro dye. This will give you a nice light color once it dries so long as you don't soak it. I would just sheepskin or use a dauber or airbrush the mixture on it. Quote
CFM tsunkasapa Posted October 22, 2022 CFM Report Posted October 22, 2022 1 hour ago, Cactusman said: Thinking of going a route of oil, sealer (TanKote), antiquing, sealer so it can be oiled/maintained better. After your final seal it will do you little good to try and oil it in the future. You have 'sealed' the oil out. Quote
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