Nowandagain Report post Posted August 20 (edited) Any suggestions for dying veg tan brown or burgundy using household materials? Leather dyes are hard to find where I live (Amazon won’t ship them here), and I want to avoid exposure to VOCs for health reasons. Haven’t found neatsfoot oil here, either Coffee comes out much too light, no matter how strong I brew it, how long I leave it, or how many coats I use. Adding ketchup to the coffee helps, but not enough. One website claims you can use pomegranate juice. They were wrong. Has anyone tried diluting vinegaroon (I’ve never used it) with coffee? Or adding steel wool to strong coffee? Any luck with strong tea? Any other suggestions? Thanks in advance. Edited August 20 by Nowandagain Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Littlef Report post Posted August 20 Something I heard of, but never experimented with is using walnuts shells or pecan shells. I found this youtube video of a guy talking about his process: Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Nowandagain Report post Posted August 20 I had seen this but I have no source for walnut skins, only shells. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Northmount Report post Posted August 20 7 hours ago, Nowandagain said: I had seen this but I have no source for walnut skins, only shells. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
1961Mike Report post Posted August 21 Hi, I live in Oklahoma, and there is a pecan orchard a few miles from home. I purchased a 25 or 50 pound bag of Pecan Hulls, a lingerie bag to boil them in, and now I have a dark brown dye. Walnut hulls also work very well. If you want DARK brown, almost black leather, use dark roast coffee that's been reduced by about half. It is HELPFUL to make some trial leather pieces to see how long to soak the leather in the dye. Later Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Nowandagain Report post Posted August 30 Mixing vinegar & steel wool into the coffee/ketchup experiment didn’t work any better than it probably tastes. It came out blotchy, uneven, black around the edges, light brown in the middle, with pin-prick black spots. Back to the drawing board. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Nowandagain Report post Posted August 30 “Hi, I live in Oklahoma, and there is a pecan orchard a few miles from home. I purchased a 25 or 50 pound bag of Pecan Hulls, a lingerie bag to boil them in, and now I have a dark brown dye. Walnut hulls also work very well. “ Unfortunately I have no source here in Israel for either type of hull. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
AlZilla Report post Posted September 2 How about shoe polish? It's not really dye, but who knows? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Littlef Report post Posted September 2 another option would be to use a wood stain from a hardware store. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Trailblazer87 Report post Posted September 4 On 8/30/2024 at 6:12 AM, Nowandagain said: “Hi, I live in Oklahoma, and there is a pecan orchard a few miles from home. I purchased a 25 or 50 pound bag of Pecan Hulls, a lingerie bag to boil them in, and now I have a dark brown dye. Walnut hulls also work very well. “ Unfortunately I have no source here in Israel for either type of hull. OK, something i might be able to help ( California pistachio grower here) with, do you have access to pistachio hulls? They should be coming available this time of year, just let them age a bit to darken up and let the tannins release. Do you have access to oak trees? The acorns are loaded with tannins, grind them up then soak them to make a very bitter tea. The other thing to try might be a dark red wine, or even Balsamic vinegar, just be sure to neutralize the acid with baking soda and a good rinse. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Nowandagain Report post Posted September 4 Trailblazer, thanks. Sadly no access to pistachio hulls or acorns either, but there’s lots of red wine here. (Sadly I had to give up alcohol this year for medical reasons, but they still sell it.) Does it matter whether you use dry or (ugh!) sweet wine? Have you had better luck with any particular type of grape? When you have used it, do you concentrate the wine first in anyway, or just use it straight from the bottle? Soak it, or swab it on? any tips you can give me would be great! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Trailblazer87 Report post Posted September 4 I haven't used it on leather intentionally, but I do know it stains. Experimentation is probably in order, the grape must (the solids left over from wine making) will possibly make for a good base, though it has a strong odor. Take those solids and make a strong tea from it. If I were to use wine, I would probably want to reduce it down to remove the alcohol and some water, might darken it up as well. As someone else mentioned above, a wood stain may be the most consistent way to get the color you want. Most hardware stores carry it. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
SUP Report post Posted September 4 Rust water stains clothes brown. Might work for leather as well. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
AlZilla Report post Posted September 4 2 hours ago, Trailblazer87 said: I haven't used it on leather intentionally, but I do know it stains. Experimentation is probably in order, the grape must (the solids left over from wine making) will possibly make for a good base, though it has a strong odor. Take those solids and make a strong tea from it. If I were to use wine, I would probably want to reduce it down to remove the alcohol and some water, might darken it up as well. As someone else mentioned above, a wood stain may be the most consistent way to get the color you want. Most hardware stores carry it. I'm not sure how you'd reduce it down, but if you're thinking to simmer it in order to evaporate the alcohol, be warned that the alcohol vapors are dangerously flammable and heavier than air. In other words, don't do it on a gas stove. Though I hear tell there's some kind of fancy cooker gadget that'll do the job. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Trailblazer87 Report post Posted September 4 Nowandagain, Would you have access to Henna? That has been used to dye leather. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
SUP Report post Posted September 5 Henna you can get at any store selling South Asian groceries. You will probably get a reddish color with that. Like Mahogany maybe? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jcuk Report post Posted September 5 (edited) Maybe you could try Beet Root juice mixed with a weak coffee or tea might give you a burgundy tan its just a thought, and at the very least the Beet Root is a vegetable. Many years ago i went to a Tannery (sadly no longer with us) to pick up some Bridle backs was going to get Dark Havana and Black then i saw this burgundy tanned one had to have that too, and to this day i am convinced Beet Root play a part in the colour could be wrong though, but i will say i think its the Best Bridle leather i have ever worked with. Hope this helps JCUK Edited September 5 by jcuk Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
1961Mike Report post Posted November 1 Hi So, my latest batch of Pecan Hull Brown Dye, was less that brown. In fact, the color that came out after more than 10 hours was a light tan. The leather got MUCH darker with a coat of Neets foot oil and a day on the dashboard in the sun dammit. My new plans include a new batch of Pecan dye and a seven minute soak in strong coffee instead of a 2 to 7 hour soak in strong coffee. What I got after 2 hours was dark dark (add more darks) brown chip of some sort. EVOO did NOTHING to it. Later Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Yellowhousejake Report post Posted November 1 Two suggestions. To use vinegaroon (disolved iron in vinegar) you must first degrease the steel wool, 30 minutes in acetone and then completely rinsed with clear water. Once done it needs to seep in the vinegar for several weeks. When it stops reacting you need to filter it through a coffee filter. When it is done it will dye leather black almost immediately. You will not have to wait to see if it works. Degreasing is key, the oil they put on steel wool to stop it rusting will make a mess of things. Fabric dye. In the US it is sold as Rit Dye and is available in most grocery stores. Does a fine job if you first wet the leather and then dunk it in warmed dye solution. I hope that helps. DAve Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites