View Full Version : Curing leather
What is the process involved in curing leather?
It depends on how sick the leather is, and what disease it suffers from.
Boys, play nice!
Sqrl, here's some info I got off ask.com. Basically just an encyclopedia article:
skin or hide of animals, cured by TANNING to prevent decay and to impart flexibility and toughness. Early peoples used pelts preserved with grease or smoke for
garments, tents, and containers. Since the 18th cent. machines have been used to split the tanned leather into the desired thicknesses of flesh layers and grain (hair-side) layers. Pelts are prepared by dehairing, cleaning, tanning, and treating with fats to ensure pliability. Finishes include glazing, staining or dye coloring, enameling or lacquering (as for patent leather),and sueding (buffing to raise a nap). Artificial leather, made since c.1850, is now mainly manufactured from vinyl PLASTIC.
and
tanning process by which skins and hides are made into LEATHER. Vegetable tanning (shown in Egyptian tomb paintings dating from 3000 B.C.) uses tannin, is usually employed for heavy leathers, and requires more than a month to complete. Mineral tanning includes alum tanning and chrome tanning, the process most common
today, requiring only a few hours. In oil tanning, or chamoising, a method used by Native Americans, the pelt is treated with fats and hung to dry; the leather is usually napped on both sides. A modern tanning process employs artificial agents (syntans).
and if you are interested in leather fetish, check out www.fetish-factory.com (http://www.fetish-factory.com)
It certainly..umm...illuminated my white-bread world! ;)
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And can it be that in a world so full and busy, the loss
of one weak creature makes a void in any heart, so
wide and deep that nothing but the width and depth
of vast eternity can fill it up!
-Charles Dickens "Dombey and Son"
mr john
08-06-1999, 08:19 PM
my 2 cents worth.I have cured a couple of deer hides. Oak leaves are a natural source of tannin, soaking the hide in a stew of deer brains and fat is a preliminary step. Napping is just rubbing and rubbing with a hard edge till your arms fall off.Then there is raw hide which is uncured. When it is wet it stretches when it drys it shrinks. The evil pagan Indians used it wet to spread eagle the poor innocent white man over the ant hill. Then the sun came out and it shrank.Then the lady with the crop and the thighboots comes out and ... HEY! how did I get to Mz Bunny's link?
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Signitorily yours, Mr John
" Pardon me while I have a strange interlude."-Marx
Lumpy
08-06-1999, 09:07 PM
What is the process involved in curing leather?
It depends on how sick the leather is, and what disease it suffers from.
Hey, no joke. Working with hides is, or least used to be, a major risk factor for contracting anthrax.
funneefarmer
08-07-1999, 05:37 AM
Tannin can be found in the tree bark of various species. But the most interesting tanning story I ever heard was that after you shot a squirrel you stripped its hide then scooped out its brains and rubbed it on the hide and tacked it on a board. Yes our forefathers were ingenious.
EnigmaOne
08-07-1999, 04:10 PM
{{{...scooped out its brains...}}}---funneefarmer
Well, I do like the SDMB for it's "cerebral" qualities--didn't expect that tho'.
Time to start cooking dinner.
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--Kalél
(The Original EnigmaOne)
mr john
08-07-1999, 09:16 PM
" Hide ,hide, a cow's outside!" Bud Abbot
Yep funee the brains soften it. Works for any critter, but you had to mention squirrel.
On behalf of us all here I would like to apologize, SqrlCub.
funneefarmer
08-08-1999, 04:31 PM
Ooops, no offense. Didn't even catch the extension of those consonants till just now.
Mea culpa, mea culpa, mea maxima culpa.
SqrlCub
08-09-1999, 07:09 AM
No offense taken.
SqrlCub
08-09-1999, 07:09 AM
If you would have talked about my cat, that would have been another story. ;)
SqrlCub
08-11-1999, 12:30 AM
One other question about curing leather. Is it true that urine can cure the leather in question? I read this once in a Gary Jennings book called Raptor and was wondering if this were true.
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