Gayle
08-21-2005, 05:38 PM
Always feel a need to start with the disclaimer, this is not my car. It is hubby's former 525 we are putting up for sale tomorrow. Doing the last detailing. Wanted to share this technique and the results.
I treated these seats a couple of years ago with a product called "Hide Food" that is lanolin and then put blue shoe polish on them. They looked fabulous mainly because of the shoe polish, not the hide food. People would get in and talk about how great the interior looked. In the recent detailing supply binge, I bought the leatherique rejuvenator oil and cleaner. The leatherique took the polish off and seats looked like **** afterwards. All the cracks stood out and the leather seemed faded. Just redid the worst spots with the shoe polish again. Much better.
Three sets of pictures to follow. First is drivers seat bottom. Second is edge of drivers seat back. Third is a spot in the back seat where the color is worn off. The camera flash makes the pictures very unforgiving. To the naked eye, they look much better than the pictures. The color looks uniform (in the flash you can see the polish which is not yet dry).
If you want to try this at home, the polish is Meltonian boot and shoe polish --color 57 Imperial blue. About $3 at shoe stores that carry a full line of supplies. Ratings: Ease of use. High. A 5 minute job. Wear rubber gloves to avoid blue fingers. Effectiveness: Based on test of last to years, highly effective. Zen fator rating: The cream in the jar is pleasant to look at. Finger paint texture. No noticeable smell.
I treated these seats a couple of years ago with a product called "Hide Food" that is lanolin and then put blue shoe polish on them. They looked fabulous mainly because of the shoe polish, not the hide food. People would get in and talk about how great the interior looked. In the recent detailing supply binge, I bought the leatherique rejuvenator oil and cleaner. The leatherique took the polish off and seats looked like **** afterwards. All the cracks stood out and the leather seemed faded. Just redid the worst spots with the shoe polish again. Much better.
Three sets of pictures to follow. First is drivers seat bottom. Second is edge of drivers seat back. Third is a spot in the back seat where the color is worn off. The camera flash makes the pictures very unforgiving. To the naked eye, they look much better than the pictures. The color looks uniform (in the flash you can see the polish which is not yet dry).
If you want to try this at home, the polish is Meltonian boot and shoe polish --color 57 Imperial blue. About $3 at shoe stores that carry a full line of supplies. Ratings: Ease of use. High. A 5 minute job. Wear rubber gloves to avoid blue fingers. Effectiveness: Based on test of last to years, highly effective. Zen fator rating: The cream in the jar is pleasant to look at. Finger paint texture. No noticeable smell.