Benny wrote:Mr Morlock wrote:One of the harshest environments for leather is on horse riding saddles. They are effected by UV ,water ,sweat, mud and of course abrasion of a riders jeans, jodphurs, chaps etc. Saddles are cleaned and treated and last generally for many years. A trip to a horse saddlery such as Horseland should get the right products. Bear in mind that riders also do not want their clothes stained nor do they want an excessively slippery saddle. I cannot see why the products used would not be interchangeable.
There may be a problem using this stuff, as horsey gear is made from vegetable tanned leather, and upholstery leather is made from chrome tanned hides.
They are 2 different tanning methods using completely different chemicals.
If you do try this stuff, try it on a test piece first, or somewhere where it can't be seen as the veg tan cleaners may change the colour of your chrome tanned leather!
Chrome tanned leather used in upholstery are corrected (had the surface sanded back to try and get rid of any scarring) and have lots of pigment on the surface to help protect it from spills and dirt.
Veg tanned leather however, is usually full grain, and the grain is somewhat porous, which is why veg tanned leather has a nice mottled look to it and is usually coloured with dyes, rather than pigments.
Veg tanned leather is also more expensive than chrome tanned leather.
Thanks for the warning Benny