Leather
Upholstery Care Tips
This article was written by Barb Carney, owner of Leather Care and Color in Chicago. Barb brings good insight into dispelling the myths so often spouted across the internet. This is valuable information for anyone who wants to prolong the life of their leather furniture or automotive leather.
Clean w/ hairspray? Condition w/ coconut oil? Moisturize w/
Vaseline? Stop the madness!
Bad
advice can lead you to permanently harm upholstery leather. Wrong info is
everywhere - even Martha Stewart Magazine or Unilever’s Cleanipedia website. But
THIS is straight from leather care professionals.
Good care is simple:
Three
easy steps will prolong the life of your leather. 1. Dust, 2. Clean, 3
Moisturize
·
Dust: Vacuum or dry dust as
needed. Do this the same frequency you dust other items in your home, like wood furniture.
·
Clean: TEST first: Apply a drop of water
to an out-of-sight area. Wait about 1 minute.
Absorbent (unprotected): Droplet soaks right in
or leaves a dark mark after a minute. Typically,
cannot be cleaned. Contact a leather professional for best advice. This
leather is classified as unfinished.
Protected: Droplet stays beaded
up, and no dark mark appears. Can be
cleaned if issues are on the surface. This leather is classified as finished.
Clean only w/ leather
cleaners labeled for leather upholstery (NOT shoes, saddles, etc).
Issues that run deeper than the surface can be:
-
Dye or ink stain – Not usually
removeable. New color coating or new leather will be needed.
-
Body oil stain – Deeply absorbed. Removal
is a repair process with recoloring needed.
-
Vomit, urine – Requires special
treatment. Contact a leather
professional for advice. New leather and padding may necessary.
·
Moisturize / condition 3
to 4 x / year.
Can add years, even a decade or
more, to leather life!
-
Only use products labeled
for leather upholstery.
-
Leather
fibrils can be dry /brittle and still feel flexible. Don’t wait for deterioration to appear!
-
Other
products usually have wrong pH
(acidity), and/or harsh chemicals.
-
Some
chemistries start harmless, but break down into harmful chemicals later.
-
See
also: How to Care for Leather Upholstery. Contact a leather repair pro for
advice early.
Myths exposed:
Bad choices most
commonly believed to be harmless / helpful (explanations below):
-
Saddle
soap
-
Traditional
dressings (mink oil, neatsfoot oil, lanolin, etc)
-
Other
oils / waxes/ fats / lubricants
-
ALL
household cleaners / cleaning wipes / “natural” cleaners / baking soda /
vinegar, etc
-
Alcohol,
acetone
-
Products
for imitation leather (vinyl, leatherette, synthetic floors)
These
can seem harmless when damaging effect is gradual,
delayed, mis-perceived. For example:
-
Glass
cleaners have alcohol in it which dissolves protective coating. Also causes pH damage.
-
Household
cleaners may clean surface, but soaks into seams/cracks, accelerating aging /
deterioration, ongoing forever. These
are overly alkaline and will cause pH damage.
-
Oil adds shine, but attracts dust, seals in
dryness, locks out needed moisture, which speeds aging.
Saddle Soap – Traditionally used to soften stiff, thick
leathers. It is not intended for upholstery.
· Not a cleaner: the "soap" part emulsifies it in
water, has little cleaning power.
· Saddle soap
WEAKENS leather by gently rotting, which is how it softens – causing pH damage.
· Leaves destructive residues, like lye. Once absorbed, causes irreversible
damage.
· Not even recommended for
most saddles anymore.
Do not use traditional
dressings: Neatsfoot Oil / Mink Oil / Lanolin: Used on saddles,
heavy boots, and machine belts.
· Neatsfoot oil is from fat
in cattle shin bones; mink oil is from fat in mink pelts; lanolin is from wool.
· Non-drying oils that soften
dense, tough leathers. BUT oxidize, darken, harden = stiff, brittle, weaker.
· May leave an oily
residue which can stain and attract dirt.
· Modern leather moisturizing products use longer-lasting, safe,
stable, non-darkening synthetic oils.
NEVER use Oils,
Waxes, Lubricants, Fats,
Conditioners:
Such as HAND or BODY moisturizers / creams / lotions / oils, cocoa butter, tea
tree oil, essential oils, petroleum jelly,
mineral oil,
hair conditioner, baby oil / baby wipes, WOOD polish, sealers, oil soaps, lemon
oil, beeswax, paraffin, SHOE polish / oils / conditioners, HORSE tack or saddle
conditioners / cleaners, MACHINE / METAL greases / oils / silicone or dry
lubricants / sprays like WD-40, FOODS: mayonnaise,
olive oil, coconut oil, vegetable
oil, cooking spray oils, Crisco, shortening, etc.
· Lacks crucial
moisture (leather is 25% water + conditioners); blocks moisture / locks in
dryness.
· On protected leather, adds shine, may soften feel; on
absorbent leather, makes a dark stain.
· But, even if used sparingly to restore sheen, remains oily
and attracts dirt.
· Residue comes off on clothes; shoe polish also stains
clothing with dye.
· People often try to remove oils with household cleaners which
cause more serious problems.
· Some oils are removable by a leather repair pro, but removal
lightens color, so recoloring needed.
· Food fats / oils have all these problems, plus attract bugs,
darken and smell rancid with age.
ALL Household Cleaners / Cleaning Wipes / Natural
Cleaners can damage leather:
· Harsh
chemistries can bleach, stain, make
permanently sticky, cause protective color to peel, burn or rot leather – instantly
or very slowly. Once absorbed it can NEVER be removed, so damage continues.
· If a leather
upholstery cleaner, does not remove all soil, call a leather repair pro, don’t
guess.
Alcohol / Acetone = solvents for leather color: Rubbing alcohol, denatured alcohol,
window cleaners, waterless hand cleaner, hairspray, nail polish remover, grain
alcohol, wine, beer, cocktails, etc.
· Removes stains only
by removing a protective coating the stain has entered.
· Does not dissolve or lift
the stain off. Dissolves the protective clear top coating and color coating
below.
· Even if used lightly,
the stripped area will soil more easily, and wear through sooner.
· If used too
aggressively or too often, can remove all color and expose raw leather.
· On absorbent leather, creates
a larger permanent stain as a dark ring.
Products for Vinyl /
Imitation Leather / Synthetic Flooring
· Lacks crucial
moisture, blocks moisture entry, locks in dryness.
· Chemicals in some can
cause stiffness, stickiness, color loss and cracking, speed aging; may make recoloring impossible in the future. Absorbent
leather, may be stained.
Also Avoid Direct Contact With:
· Flea collars, drops (let soak in a few hours), spray
or powdered treatments– can bleach color.
· Perfumes, cologne, spray air freshener – can stain /
bleach color
· Dyes: paint, ink (permanent marker, ballpoint), dye (hair
or clothes) – permanent stain that enlarges with time.
· Chlorinated swimming pool water – bleaches color
· Skin lotions, creams, exfoliating products, tanning
products, sunscreen – alter color, cause peeling
· Pesticides, insecticide “bombs”, moth balls, moth
repellents – alter color, cause peeling
· Pet repellents: bitter apple or other scents can
stain, bleach (safe to apply to fabric under cushions, or dust cover under
furniture), sticky paws anti-cat scratch strips can cause peeling.