Members T Moore Medicine Hat Saddlery Posted January 29, 2020 Members Report Posted January 29, 2020 How would you attempt to soften up a super dry hard leather on a saddle. The regular meats foot and lexol seems to be having no effect. Never seen this before. Any suggestions ? Quote
Members oltoot Posted January 29, 2020 Members Report Posted January 29, 2020 After cleaning surface, see if you can rehydrate by wrapping, covering w/ wet to be kept wet towels and rags. Will take more than a little while. If successful rehydrated will soak up oils. Quote
Members BigSiouxSaddlery Posted January 29, 2020 Members Report Posted January 29, 2020 It could be past the point of no return. . .that does happen. Other possibility is that it was poor leather to start with. Both of those scenarios mean that no matter how much or what product you throw at it, it isn't going to change. I have the best luck with soaking the parts in water to clean them and allow me to take the curl out as they dry, and brush oil on when they are close to being dry. If this doesn't get them, in my experience, nothing will. Quote
Members jcuk Posted January 29, 2020 Members Report Posted January 29, 2020 Hi there, I agree with the previous answers i am assuming you mean neats foot oil if, so correct me if you are already doing this, but are you slightly heating the neats foot oil up a bit to around tepid or maybe slightly more it will help it penetrate the fibres better? Hope this helps JCUK Quote
Members T Moore Medicine Hat Saddlery Posted February 7, 2020 Author Members Report Posted February 7, 2020 Have pretty much tried everything. I've never seen this problem exactly like this. I've tried just about everything. I heard saddlers one step cleaner and conditioner might do it. I am about to the point of calling it good and sending it back like it is Quote
Contributing Member fredk Posted February 7, 2020 Contributing Member Report Posted February 7, 2020 (edited) a suggestion, extreme measure - have you tried steaming it? get it into a sauna type place, let it steam for a while and whilst in there apply nfo by the sponge full I use to do this with my motorcycle boots about once every spring to soften them up after the wetting and salting they got over the winter months, although I used leather feed and olive oil Edited February 7, 2020 by fredk Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.