keyofnight
Member
I was thumbing through a few pages on how to best care for old leather (on cameras), and I came across these remarks by Matt Denton:
…his search for great leather conditioner got me thinking about all the different kinds of leather products I've tried in the past. I've tried Lexol-branded leather conditioner, mink oil (with pine pitch), Fiebing's 4-way leather conditioner, and some strange thick concoction called "Leather Honey" that my mother uses on her expensive handbags. (To be honest, I really liked the Leather Honey too.)
After reading Matt's remarks, though, I decided to try some of the skin products we keep around the house: cocoa butter body cream, coconut oil, and Lush-brand "Coco Lotion." I have to say that the cocoa butter cream and the "Coco Lotion" both did really well on my Rolleicord V. I still think Leather Honey is the best, I've seen it make a 20 year old piece of ostrich skin come back to life, grow feathers, and kick things—I need to buy a bottle of that stuff.
So, folks! What kind of stuff have you used on leather? Anything weird or different?
[…] I'm still looking for a good leather conditioner for dry leather, I've tried Lexol (good), black and neutral shoe polish (good), beeswax (too thick & waxy), mink oil (good), cocoa butter stretch mark lotion (nice, plus makes your camera smell yummy) and pure lanolin (OK but use sparingly). So far the Lexol and cocoa butter are the best, the beeswax and pure lanolin are much too thick and the others too thin. I'm trying some leather conditioner called 'Blue Magic' that seems OK. Depends on whether you're trying to rejuvinate dry leather or protect good leather. Luckily I have some old beaters to experiment on.
…his search for great leather conditioner got me thinking about all the different kinds of leather products I've tried in the past. I've tried Lexol-branded leather conditioner, mink oil (with pine pitch), Fiebing's 4-way leather conditioner, and some strange thick concoction called "Leather Honey" that my mother uses on her expensive handbags. (To be honest, I really liked the Leather Honey too.)
After reading Matt's remarks, though, I decided to try some of the skin products we keep around the house: cocoa butter body cream, coconut oil, and Lush-brand "Coco Lotion." I have to say that the cocoa butter cream and the "Coco Lotion" both did really well on my Rolleicord V. I still think Leather Honey is the best, I've seen it make a 20 year old piece of ostrich skin come back to life, grow feathers, and kick things—I need to buy a bottle of that stuff.
So, folks! What kind of stuff have you used on leather? Anything weird or different?