How to get leather back to new matt finish

How to get leather back to new matt finish

Author
Discussion

Blackfeather

Original Poster:

148 posts

178 months

Sunday 16th October 2016
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I have stupidly let the local car wash loose on my 2015 Vanquish and they have used some crappy leather stuff on the interior. Not too much but in places it is now shiny instead of that new look matt finish.

Is it possible to get it back to the original finish without costing a fortune?

JKay

573 posts

201 months

Sunday 16th October 2016
quotequote all
Leatherique! Google it it's awesome

Rejuvenator oil first then prestine clean

Key is to get the car hot let it bake in the sun. It's done wonders for me, but google will tell you as well

V8V Pete

2,497 posts

126 months

Sunday 16th October 2016
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Blackfeather said:
I have stupidly let the local car wash loose on my 2015 Vanquish
yikesyikesyikesyikesyikesyikesyikesyikesyikesyikesyikesyikes

Not much help I know but WTF?

bitchstewie

51,204 posts

210 months

Sunday 16th October 2016
quotequote all
Dr Leather wipes or Gliptone/Liquid Leather and a soft brush are good options.

LTT are also good but you can get the stuff above by tomorrow off Amazon.

bogie

16,382 posts

272 months

Sunday 16th October 2016
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as asbove www.liquidleather.com

the regular conditioner leaves a matt finish, although they do a new matt finish product now, not tried it

roughrider

975 posts

186 months

Sunday 16th October 2016
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Baby wipes work on Alcantara steering wheels, maybe they would be good on your seats?

theaxe

3,559 posts

222 months

Sunday 16th October 2016
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I'd be worried about the paint too. Did you gain swirl marks from the (presumably) gritty wash mitts?

Blackfeather

Original Poster:

148 posts

178 months

Monday 17th October 2016
quotequote all
V8V Pete said:
yikesyikesyikesyikesyikesyikesyikesyikesyikesyikesyikesyikes

Not much help I know but WTF?
I know, I know.

dbs2000

2,688 posts

192 months

Wednesday 19th October 2016
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The zaino products do a pretty nice job on the leather too

AMDBSVNick

6,995 posts

162 months

Wednesday 19th October 2016
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dbs2000 said:
The zaino products do a pretty nice job on the leather too
This

Mine came up as new thumbup

brakedwell

1,229 posts

199 months

Wednesday 19th October 2016
quotequote all
No need to rub any more chemicals into the the leather. These pads are amazing, just wet them and wipe the seats/steering wheel clean then dry. Matt finish guaranteed. I have been using them for over three years to remove the shine from steering wheels and seats

http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/10-Pack-Magic-Cleaning-S...

PJI

306 posts

206 months

Wednesday 19th October 2016
quotequote all
The best way to do this is use a clean damp Meguiar's Water Magnet Drying Towel (or similar) and gently wipe over the surfaces. When dry this will return the leather to way it looked when new.


blade runner

1,029 posts

212 months

Thursday 20th October 2016
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brakedwell said:
No need to rub any more chemicals into the the leather. These pads are amazing, just wet them and wipe the seats/steering wheel clean then dry. Matt finish guaranteed. I have been using them for over three years to remove the shine from steering wheels and seats

http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/10-Pack-Magic-Cleaning-S...
Are those just regular cellulose foam pads (magic erasers)? If so, then they are basically just a super fine abrasive media. So very good at cleaning and removing stains from hard surfaces, but I'd worry they'd also remove some of the sealer if used on leather? Not saying you're not right, just that I've always been a bit wary of using these on softer materials.

brakedwell

1,229 posts

199 months

Thursday 20th October 2016
quotequote all
blade runner said:
Are those just regular cellulose foam pads (magic erasers)? If so, then they are basically just a super fine abrasive media. So very good at cleaning and removing stains from hard surfaces, but I'd worry they'd also remove some of the sealer if used on leather? Not saying you're not right, just that I've always been a bit wary of using these on softer materials.
Yes they are, but they seem to suck of any gunge. A gentle for for a very short time does the trick.. They haven't damaged the leather in my DB9, A8 or Cayenne.
or Porsche Cayenne.

goddo

439 posts

132 months

Tuesday 25th October 2016
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brakedwell said:
No need to rub any more chemicals into the the leather. These pads are amazing, just wet them and wipe the seats/steering wheel clean then dry. Matt finish guaranteed. I have been using them for over three years to remove the shine from steering wheels and seats

http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/10-Pack-Magic-Cleaning-S...
I just bought some of these pads and, as you say, they are amazing.
Don't know if they are impregnated (no smell to them) or if it is just the abrasive texture of the sponge itself which removes the dirt.
Whatever it is, they work. Thanks for the tip.

CSK1

1,604 posts

124 months

Tuesday 25th October 2016
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Magic sponges are amazing but be careful not to rub too heavily on the leather as I had the colour fading away on one of my previous Range Rovers using one of these. I think they're OK for hard surfaces like plastic but they can damage the leather.

wotnoburgers

149 posts

100 months

Sunday 30th October 2016
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goddo said:
I just bought some of these pads and, as you say, they are amazing.
Don't know if they are impregnated (no smell to them) or if it is just the abrasive texture of the sponge itself which removes the dirt.
Whatever it is, they work. Thanks for the tip.
+1 on the above
I dont know whats in them but they really do work!!!

divetheworld

2,565 posts

135 months

Sunday 30th October 2016
quotequote all
blade runner said:
brakedwell said:
No need to rub any more chemicals into the the leather. These pads are amazing, just wet them and wipe the seats/steering wheel clean then dry. Matt finish guaranteed. I have been using them for over three years to remove the shine from steering wheels and seats

http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/10-Pack-Magic-Cleaning-S...
Are those just regular cellulose foam pads (magic erasers)? If so, then they are basically just a super fine abrasive media. So very good at cleaning and removing stains from hard surfaces, but I'd worry they'd also remove some of the sealer if used on leather? Not saying you're not right, just that I've always been a bit wary of using these on softer materials.
They are abrasive. Try rubbing one on a coloured painted wall in your house and then see how much it removes. I wouldnt use these on my leather in a million years.
Dr Leather spray or wipes and a microfibre cloth is all you need. Just wipe over and dry straight away with the cloth. Sorted, matt and smelling of leather again.

Controller

7 posts

89 months

Friday 25th November 2016
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I believe they have something like formaldehyde in them! Here is a quote form the David Suzuki Society:

I wrote to P&G, the company that makes Magic Eraser, and a member of the Mr. Clean Team got back to me within 24 hours.
She outlined some "Mr. Clean Magic Eraser facts":
Formaldehyde is not and has never been an ingredient.

The response goes on to explain that "this product has been mistakenly associated as containing formaldehyde because one of its ingredients contained the word 'formaldehyde' in its chemical name (formaldehyde-melamine-sodium bisulfate copolymer). However, this ingredient is not formaldehyde. Think of this name like 'sodium chloride', which is table salt. Sodium by itself can be dangerous, but sodium chloride (table salt) is safe."

divetheworld

2,565 posts

135 months

Friday 25th November 2016
quotequote all
What the actual feck?