Dear Roger
Are these still transported to abroad? The Lamb Leather bag need to clean, at present.
(A photo shown as below)
Hope to get your response. Thank you
Lin
Dear Roger
Are these still transported to abroad? The Lamb Leather bag need to clean, at present.
(A photo shown as below)
Hope to get your response. Thank you
Lin
Last edited by lin6564; 03-31-2010 at 06:25 PM.
See how to post pictures in this link:
http://www.leathercleaningrestoratio...read.php?t=148
Identification of leather types will determine the best approach to remove the blue jean dye stain.
Question:
1. Test with a drop of Cleaner-3.8 to see if the leather is absorbent?
2. Test the brown lace if it bleeds?
3. Is the
Option for removal:
If the cream leather and the brown lace are non-absorbent the recommended sequence of process is as follows:
Prep-7.7 > Cleaner-3.8 > Rinse-3.0.
If the leather and the lace are absorbent the recommended process is:
Prep-4.4 > Cleaner-3.8 > Rinse-3.0.
To remove the last trace of the dye stain d’Tarnish-1.3 may help too.
Roger Koh
Leather Doctor®
Using the Prep-7.7 with cotton swabs which used overnight to clean, it cloud not clean the blue stain, can I use leather rubber to clean it? If the cleaning need to use solvent, what kind of solvents should be used? Is suitable with acetone?
It is best to do a test prior to the actual application.
Drip a drop of Prep-7.7 on the stain choosing an inconspicuous area.
Let it stay an hour to see if the dye moves, wipe off and reapply on the same spot and leave overnight to inspect again. Otherwise repeat until it response prior to Cleaner-3.8 and Rinse-3.0.
Dye stains response by "Dwell Time" more than "Physical Action" (As the stains might have been penetrated, harsh rubbing may damage the finishes).
Solvent may damage non-solvent resistance leather finishes.
See how dye stains have been successfully removed in this thread
http://www.leathercleaningrestoratio...ead.php?t=3988
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