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Posted

I'm interested in hearing how some of you apply the proverbial "light coat of oil," and evenly to veg tan. In my case it's HO veg tan and I use extra virgin olive oil and apply it with a trimmed piece of sheep skin. I get along fine if I want to end up with a project that's slightly darkened. My problem comes when I want the project to end up pretty light colored. I antique most of my work. Pure neatsfoot oil turns HO veg tan a darker reddish tone, which is good when that's what I want and for some projects. But when it come to getting a light, even coat of EVOO a lot of the time it seems I end up with some darker spots. It seems that the standard method of application is with a piece of sheep skin. Do some of you only use the sheep skin until the actual "skin," starts to get saturated and then switch to a fresh piece where the oil is only loaded into the fibers?

Thanks in advance!

Bill

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Posted

Bill,

I use a fine napped paint roller and a tray. I pour my oil in, then roll it off on the ramp until I get the amount I want on the roller. If you really squeeze it out you will get a pretty light coat. Then roll it on the piece. That is pretty much how I do everything that can lay flat. I don't get swirl marks and what little overlap there is evens out pretty fast.

Bruce Johnson

Malachi 4:2

"the windshield's bigger than the mirror, somewhere west of Laramie" - Dave Stamey

Vintage Refurbished And Selected New Leather Tools For Sale - www.brucejohnsonleather.com

Posted

I use a piece of trimmed sheep skin and put it over the evoo bottle turn the bottle over and pull the sheep skin across the mouth of the bottle and they turn out nice i think. You might try some lexol to.

I'm old enough to know that i don't know everything.

Posted

Bill,

I use a fine napped paint roller and a tray. I pour my oil in, then roll it off on the ramp until I get the amount I want on the roller. If you really squeeze it out you will get a pretty light coat. Then roll it on the piece. That is pretty much how I do everything that can lay flat. I don't get swirl marks and what little overlap there is evens out pretty fast.

Bruce, thanks for the paint roller idea, that sounds like it would work. I will give it a try on some scraps and try to figure out how much oil is needed on the roller. Where I have issues is on smooth veg tan rather than on tooled pieces. As we know person needs to be more cautious in applying oil to tooling because it will soak it up a lot quicker and more freely than smooth parts. Blotches that aren't excessive don't show up as bad on tooling as they do on a smooth area. And you can put quite a bit more on the smooth parts without it darkening.

I thought I had the perfect idea one time and bought a kitchen salad oil pump sprayer and thought I could spray it on evenly.....not! That thing spayed it out in a real coarse spray rather than a fine mist, more like in globs. So much for that idea. It does work on salad though.

Thanks everybody for your responses!

Bill

  • Members
Posted

Where I have issues is on smooth veg tan rather than on tooled pieces. As we know person needs to be more cautious in applying oil to tooling because it will soak it up a lot quicker and more freely than smooth parts.

Just a crazy idea but however.... for smooth areas ... have somebody tried to apply oil onto only flesh side keeping grain untouched?

btw these spots you see with EVOO might be caused by uneven leather\s density though....

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Posted

try warming your oil, it breaks down the fat deposits in the oil. penatrates the leather more evenly, uses less oil. This was done for Jan. challange on here, I gave it a light coat of NF oil after. Extra,extra virgin and it would have been super light.

Al

Lloyd Allan custom Leather (Al)

Find us at facebook.com/LloydAllanCustomLeather

Everyone welcome

Posted

Suicide, the blotching could be due to variations in the leather? It seems like it happens more often on real thin stuff like 2-3 oz HO veg tan that I use for lining.

I noticed a weird think in some 5-6 oz that I'm making a briefcase out of. While I was carving/stamping the corners, notice little black flecks/spots in the swivel knife cuts when I beveled them. There was nothing like it visible on the suface. It was something within the leather. It wasn't isn't a problem but I don't recall ever noticing that before. I am wondering if I is just a weird side I got or something from a certain breed? I've just never seen it in my life.

Colt Breaker. I have warmed my oil before and know that it sure penetrates/soaks in alot faster when you do that. It can get pretty chilly in my garage/shop this time of year even with a heater going and the EVOO is kind of thick. So a little warm sure wouldn't be a bad idea! I need to start paying more attention to that and take the time to prep the oil before I use it.

Thanks ya'll!

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Posted

I keep my oil in a small crock pot, turn on low first thing, on the days I am doing all my finishing.

Lloyd Allan custom Leather (Al)

Find us at facebook.com/LloydAllanCustomLeather

Everyone welcome

Posted

I keep my oil in a small crock pot, turn on low first thing, on the days I am doing all my finishing.

That's a good idea. Least I could do is keep it in the house, that would help some.

Thanks for the idea!

Bill

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