Boriqua Report post Posted October 21, 2015 (edited) Well I figure I should post my fails in case anyone else was going to try. I mean I already spent the time and material money! So I have used coffee to dye small leather pieces for some jewelry type pieces and loved the look so decided I would try it on a bag. I boiled about 1/2 can of the cheapest ground coffee I could buy in about 4 qts of water and boiled it for about 1 hour and let it cool. After it cooled I put all of it including the grounds in a large aluminium tray and soaked my pieces for about 5 hours. I wasnt happy with the results but had noticed that one small piece I had piled grounds on top had come out with a cool mottled appearance that spoke to me. I took my pieces out of the soup and put the soup back in my pot added the rest of the can of grounds and boiled it some more. I put my pieces back in the aluminium pan and without straining the grounds poured the cooled coffee mess on my pieces and specifically covered the pieces in a layer of grounds. I left it over night. Pieces came out neat looking and after they dried I was thrilled. BUT they were as brittle as hell. So I rub neatsfoot oil into the pieces and let them set overnight. Still a little concerned I rub a light coat again in the morning and I move on to paying projects and come back to this a few days later. As I am sewing on one of the loops that holds a "D" ring in place on to the back piece I pop a hole. While it happens from time to time I have been handsewing for a long time and my elbows are pretty tension calibrated. I havent popped a hole in forever. I figure its me and move on with less pressure. I leave it to work on other stuff and a few more days pass and I take out my little pet project to sew the gusset onto the face. I'm being a little more careful about tension but still ... I manage to pop about 3 more spaces and finally ... I cut up the bag to save the hardware and call it a failed experiment. So any clues ... Im thinkng that the acid? in the coffee just destroyed the leather. I have another bag I did with Blueberry dye which worked out fine and it soaked for just as many hours so I dont think it is the amount of time it spent in liquid. Edited October 21, 2015 by Boriqua Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
switchman Report post Posted October 22, 2015 I think maybe the high tannin content of coffee may have something to do with it. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
epiphanist1248 Report post Posted November 3, 2015 I kind of wonder about using the aluminum tray with the strong coffee and the leather, and if that's just too many chemicals jockeying for supremacy at once and making a mess of your leather. Maybe try a Pyrex dish for soaking? At least to eliminate one variable. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
TomBanwell Report post Posted November 20, 2015 I'm thinking that maybe like using vinegaroon you need to neutralize the acidity with baking soda & water or something similar. I also would be nervous about using an aluminum dish rather than glass. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites