screeby said:
Like the title says, the leather on my wife's Edge looks like it is starting crack. It is on her left side, about rib height. Some of this is most probably from sliding in the seat and pushing the padding one way then the other. The lower left half of the seat is looking the same way. Now, it isn't "terrible" yet, but it will be soon. Anyone used a product that slows or halts this process. I'm guessing that correcting it is not an option but stopping it where it is at would be awesome. TIA.
When leather is dried of its fat and oil and with constant compressing, stretching and flexing it will lead to cracks.
Replenishing the diminishing fat and oil will restore the softness to the leather.
The fat plumps the leather with fullness from collapsing like cardboard and the oil lubricates the millions of connecting hinges to slide over one another without breaking these leather fibrils.
However, with the uneven tension, the thickness of the leather structure will need to be relaxed and all the fibrils separated prior to effective fat and oil replenishing.
At the molecular level, the protein fiber is ionic positive (+ve) charged with a pH 3.3 hydrator below its iso-electric point to achieve an effective hydrogen-bond with the ionic negative (-ve) charged pH 5.0 fatliquor.
This basic leather rejuvenating when done accordingly, will put a stop to the crack and the rest of the leather regain its strength from the replenished fat and oil.
Leather rejuvenating technique . . .
#1 Fatliquor applied to the cleaned surface and after hydrating
#2 A paper rag/towel is used as a reservoir to contain the fatliquor and is covered with a plastic cling wrapper to control evaporation
Roger Koh
info@leatherdoctor.com