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Posted (edited)

U can also use Acetone from any hardware store to clean your leather with. Lacquer thinner works in worse cases but will dry out your leather.

For a cement I use Weldwood Gel contact cement and apply it with cheep paint brushes. The gel gives me total control and the contact cement flexes after assembly. I can use really small artist brushes on small items and never get it on anything I didn't intend to.

Edited by Johnny B
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Posted

I bet it would look nice if you burnished the entire outside instead of just that one spot...

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if its not too late to save your project, this is what my instructor has taught us to use.

Unfortunetly I dont know the name of this stuff, but he said he got ifrom a cobbler, its yellow and spongy (but like its made out of rubber). It seems the be the stuff that rubber soles are made out of (the real spongy cushiony material. He has shown us in class to just rub it on the spot like an eraser, and he takes the glue off, you should even be able to dye normally afterwards.

I hope this helps.

"A wolf wins every fight except one, in that one he dies"

Nightwolf

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Posted

i have gotten this problem all the time whenever i used rubber cement but i was able to remove it with a high grit sandpaper and then resmoothed the whole piece, doesnt work with tooled leather, end up using other means for it. the sand paper does seem to remove the burnish for me

Art is not a mirror to reflect the world but a hammer to shape it.

Posted

Thanks y'all for your tips. I think I will stick with this white cement as I like how clean it is at the edges. I've put the wallet to own use. There's no damage really, just not commercially pretty.

I've found a product on springfield's site that removes stains and glue and i'd be sure to include that in my next order.

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Posted

Just finished a wallet and was feeling rather pleased with myself. Then as I was applying leather balm on the exterior, I noticed 2 spots which wouldn't soak in the balm. Upon closer look, it looks like somehow, 2 drops of leather craft cement (the white very liquid type) has gotten onto it.

As I have success washing my cement brush simply by soaking it in water, I decided to wet a small cloth, apply a little white saddle soap and work that area.

Turns out, the spots not only remained, the area became burnished. I'm about to throw this wallet out of the window in frustration, it's probably a goner but just wanna try my luck and see if anything can be done to return it to its natural colour.

Ohh Red don't get so down on yourself and NEVER throw your stuff away, everything that you make is a part of you good or bad and you should be proud of the fact that it is something that you made, besides that it is a really cool wallet, why not take a tooth brush and splatter cement all over it and then do the same thing you did trying to get out the other two spots and you would have the first polka dot burnished wallet around. i think it would look cool. Keep your head up and hang in there.

Peace and Love

Bryan

Don't like sugar in my coffee But love coffee with my sugar!!!!!

Posted

Thanks Bryan. I guess i do need to see things from a different perspective sometimes. As a kid, I used to draw alot, do my pencil drawings without an eraser. Any mistakes, I throw away the piece and start anew. But leather is so much more expensive that paper!

I've thrown away alot of projects since. This one, I am keeping for my own use. Right now, I am in the midst of making THREE more just to spite the first one! Hehe..

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Posted

Springfield Leather sells it as an all purpose eraser, item number 153-1. Cost is a few dollars, works great on contact cement, rubber cement and claims it works on white glue too. For fingerprints, oils, metal stains and other debris Fred also recommends oxalic acid (wood bleach), works great in preparing leather for dying.

If you can't fix it, USMC black covers EVERYTHING. (Doctors bury their mistakes, leather workers use USMC black).

if its not too late to save your project, this is what my instructor has taught us to use.

Unfortunetly I dont know the name of this stuff, but he said he got ifrom a cobbler, its yellow and spongy (but like its made out of rubber). It seems the be the stuff that rubber soles are made out of (the real spongy cushiony material. He has shown us in class to just rub it on the spot like an eraser, and he takes the glue off, you should even be able to dye normally afterwards.

I hope this helps.

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Posted (edited)

if its not too late to save your project, this is what my instructor has taught us to use.

Unfortunetly I dont know the name of this stuff, but he said he got ifrom a cobbler, its yellow and spongy (but like its made out of rubber). It seems the be the stuff that rubber soles are made out of (the real spongy cushiony material. He has shown us in class to just rub it on the spot like an eraser, and he takes the glue off, you should even be able to dye normally afterwards.

I hope this helps.

It''s called crepe rubber.......I think.

Edited by Razz

If you get to thinkin' you're a person of some influence, try orderin' somebody else's dog around.

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