Gawdzilla Report post Posted February 9, 2011 My late wife was a librarian and she used "Goo Gone" to remove tape residue from books. I was wondering if anybody had ever used it on leather? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
rodeomic Report post Posted February 9, 2011 My late wife was a librarian and she used "Goo Gone" to remove tape residue from books. I was wondering if anybody had ever used it on leather? No, but I have used acetone. Not familiar with Goo Gone. Good luck! Roger Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Gawdzilla Report post Posted February 10, 2011 Thanks. I'll report back. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Gawdzilla Report post Posted February 10, 2011 First test: It removed dried rubber cement cleanly. Next test is to do strips of untouched leather alternating with treated leather to see if dyes are affected. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
JohnBarton Report post Posted February 11, 2011 You can use a light oil sometimes. I use olive oil or even facial oil (eeeeewww) to remove glue residue. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Gawdzilla Report post Posted February 11, 2011 You can use a light oil sometimes. I use olive oil or even facial oil (eeeeewww) to remove glue residue. Is that "spot cleaning" or should I do the whole piece to keep it even? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
JohnBarton Report post Posted February 12, 2011 Is that "spot cleaning" or should I do the whole piece to keep it even? If you use a VERY VERY little bit then you can just do it on the area with the glue and the oil will dissipate quickly. What I like to do with olive oil is to put a little bit on a washcloth. Then I dab that on a piece of cardboard and THEN I rub my finger lightly on the washcloth and use my finger to gently remove the glue. That seems to work most of the time. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Gawdzilla Report post Posted February 12, 2011 If you use a VERY VERY little bit then you can just do it on the area with the glue and the oil will dissipate quickly. What I like to do with olive oil is to put a little bit on a washcloth. Then I dab that on a piece of cardboard and THEN I rub my finger lightly on the washcloth and use my finger to gently remove the glue. That seems to work most of the time. I'll keep that in mind. Full day at the wolf sanctuary so it will be tomorrow before I get the test strips done on the Goo Gone. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Gawdzilla Report post Posted February 15, 2011 Okay. I applied Goo Gone to clean leather and let it set overnight. I dyed the leather this morning and got no indication of stripes. So far so good. The stuff is really good on rubber cement, a vaguely damp paper towel cleaned dried cement off some leather quickly. I'm letting that dry to see if there's any "ghosts" from the glue when I dye it. Oh, by the way, "your mileage may vary", so test it out for yourself to see if you get good usable results. The above was inspired by a recent commercial. At the bottom it said, "Close course, professional driver, do not attempt." The car in question NEVER LEFT THE GARAGE. So we should not attempt to leave a parked car in a garage? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Go2Tex Report post Posted February 15, 2011 Rubber cement usually just rubs off anyway. It doesn't seem to penetrate. Try it on regular contact cement. About the best thing I've found for that is the stuff they sell at autoparts stores for removing road tar. Then lots and lots of deglazer will maybe allow the dye to penetrate the leather where the glue was, but don't count on it. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Gawdzilla Report post Posted February 15, 2011 Rubber cement usually just rubs off anyway. It doesn't seem to penetrate. Try it on regular contact cement. About the best thing I've found for that is the stuff they sell at autoparts stores for removing road tar. Then lots and lots of deglazer will maybe allow the dye to penetrate the leather where the glue was, but don't count on it. Okay, I'll try it on contact cement. Stand by for news! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites