Red leather seats in need of a refresh!

Red leather seats in need of a refresh!

Author
Discussion

Jonny_

Original Poster:

4,125 posts

207 months

Wednesday 12th July 2017
quotequote all
We've recently bought a 2010 Alfa Giulietta, which has a rather jazzy red leather interior. It's generally in pretty good condition given the age of the car, but I'd like to get it looking a bit smarter if poss.

Firstly, being relatively light in colour it has the usual slight discolouration caused by dark coloured clothing - quite visible in the pics on the drivers' backrest in particular, in fact I think it looks worse on camera than it does in reality!

What's a good product and method for shifting this? Initial thought was just to pick up some semi-decent leather cleaning spray (Auto Glym/Meguiars type stuff) and a soft brush, which would certainly shift everyday muck, but would this tackle the discolouration?

Secondly, there's some light "cracking" in the surface of the driver's seat bolsters, shown in the pics below. I'd like to try and mask this as much as possible, again not sure what products or method would be best. Looking around online it could need anything from just a good clean and a bit of conditioner on the areas where the coating has worn through, to a sand down and recolour (which I'm not entirely confident in doing).

I'm not looking to spend a fortune on it, as it's ultimately a £5k car that serves mostly as a runabout for my fiance, but if £30-40 of materials and an afternoons' work can make a noticeable improvement then I'll be happy. smile





untakenname

4,966 posts

192 months

Thursday 13th July 2017
quotequote all
I had good results on cream seats using a magic eraser, tried using a selection leather cleaning products first but it didn't do much.
The magic eraser is slightly abrasive so only use with light pressure in a unnoticeable area first to test and make sure to condition the seats after.

Thinking about it I own a decade old Mazda so the seats are probably PU leather rather than real so that maybe why the leather cleaning products I used didn't seem to work.

pmanson

13,382 posts

253 months

Thursday 13th July 2017
quotequote all
I cleaned the red interior on my XF last week (suddenly realised how much my blue jeans had affected the drivers seat in the last two years and 50k miles)

Anyway I had some gliptone leather cleaner and conditioner left over from when I had my TVR.

Easy to use cleaner (just follow the instructions) and then finish up with the conditioner.

http://www.cleanyourcar.co.uk/index.php?_a=viewBra...

Less than £20 for both (I'd get the brush too) and a couple of hours work

Edited by pmanson on Thursday 13th July 08:19

mon the fish

1,415 posts

148 months

Thursday 13th July 2017
quotequote all
Get the above Gliptone kit, but inbetween stages use this:

https://www.furnitureclinic.co.uk/Leather_Repair_T...

That will fill the cracks nicely. Takes a bit of time to mix to get the colour match spot on but worth it IMO

Rob_R

2,428 posts

245 months

Thursday 13th July 2017
quotequote all
For the cleaning side of things use Pear's soap. Really.

I used it after a tip-off on the M3 Cutters forum; It works a treat.

Summit_Detailing

1,889 posts

193 months

Friday 14th July 2017
quotequote all
Gtechniq I2 tri-clean and some short pile microfibres to clean.

Dr Leather Dye Block to protect.

cheers

Chris

del mar

2,838 posts

199 months

Friday 14th July 2017
quotequote all
mon the fish said:
Get the above Gliptone kit, but inbetween stages use this:

https://www.furnitureclinic.co.uk/Leather_Repair_T...

That will fill the cracks nicely. Takes a bit of time to mix to get the colour match spot on but worth it IMO
I used the furniture clinic kit to re colour a Ferrari seat - worked well.

They sell a tub of flexi filler that you fill the cracks with, you then sand it down with a very fine paper and spray the colour and sealant over the top.


Jonny_

Original Poster:

4,125 posts

207 months

Saturday 15th July 2017
quotequote all
Thanks all.

I'll have a look into what's been suggested as there seem to be a lot of options! smile

Not sure about the sanding and filling though, quite a lot of potential for me to make a mess of that, haha. One thing I was pondering was using a "wipe-on" colourant in between cleaning and conditioning. Something like:
https://www.liquidleather.com/scuffmaster-dyes/61-...
to mask the cracks, without risking making things worse by sanding.

Fermit The Krog and Sexy Sarah

12,908 posts

100 months

Saturday 15th July 2017
quotequote all
My business is a leather restoration company. A bit far from you I suspect (NG20) but I'm happy to give you pointers if you wish.

untakenname

4,966 posts

192 months

Sunday 23rd July 2017
quotequote all
Rob_R said:
For the cleaning side of things use Pear's soap. Really.

I used it after a tip-off on the M3 Cutters forum; It works a treat.
Cheers, I've just used this on my new (to me) car which has stone leather seats after not having much luck with the cleaning products I had in the garage, resigned myself to paying for a full professional refurb or dye but gave this method a go and it works unbelievably well.

During
[url]

Before and after contrast.

Jonny_

Original Poster:

4,125 posts

207 months

Sunday 23rd July 2017
quotequote all
Fermit The Krog and Sexy Sarah said:
My business is a leather restoration company. A bit far from you I suspect (NG20) but I'm happy to give you pointers if you wish.
Cheers Fermit (quality user name by the way!). Yes a bit of a trek to Notts for me, I'm afraid. Used to work around NG22 quite a lot but haven't been down that way for some time now.

At the moment, I'm thinking along the lines of the following method, based on this thread and also the Liquid Leather instructions...

1. Thoroughly clean whole interior with either Liquid Leather/Gliptone cleaner or Pear's Soap (I'm most impressed by Untakenname's photos above!) and a soft nailbrush.
2. Apply Liquid Leather GT11 conditioner to cracked areas (to soften, as recommended on Liquid Leather webpage).
3. Clean cracked areas again.
4. Wipe cracked areas with Liquid Leather degreasant.
5. Apply colour-matched Liquid Leather Scuffmaster dye (Alfa Romeo 901 Red) to the cracked areas on the drivers' seat.
6. Apply GT11 conditioner to the whole interior.

Hoping that will get rid of the dark jeans discolouration and also get the drivers' side bolster looking tidier, without risking my making things worse by inept attempts at sanding and filling - does that sound like a reasonable plan?

Fermit The Krog and Sexy Sarah

12,908 posts

100 months

Sunday 23rd July 2017
quotequote all
Jonny_ said:
Fermit The Krog and Sexy Sarah said:
My business is a leather restoration company. A bit far from you I suspect (NG20) but I'm happy to give you pointers if you wish.
Cheers Fermit (quality user name by the way!). Yes a bit of a trek to Notts for me, I'm afraid. Used to work around NG22 quite a lot but haven't been down that way for some time now.

At the moment, I'm thinking along the lines of the following method, based on this thread and also the Liquid Leather instructions...

1. Thoroughly clean whole interior with either Liquid Leather/Gliptone cleaner or Pear's Soap (I'm most impressed by Untakenname's photos above!) and a soft nailbrush.
2. Apply Liquid Leather GT11 conditioner to cracked areas (to soften, as recommended on Liquid Leather webpage).
3. Clean cracked areas again.
4. Wipe cracked areas with Liquid Leather degreasant.
5. Apply colour-matched Liquid Leather Scuffmaster dye (Alfa Romeo 901 Red) to the cracked areas on the drivers' seat.
6. Apply GT11 conditioner to the whole interior.

Hoping that will get rid of the dark jeans discolouration and also get the drivers' side bolster looking tidier, without risking my making things worse by inept attempts at sanding and filling - does that sound like a reasonable plan?
Having not personally used Liquid Leathers products I can't comment on their quality, but they should be OK. I'd maybe Google opinions of their users?

I'd be wary with soap, as it can shrink leather, just so you are aware.

RE the jean stains, you MUST remove this prior to re-colouring, as otherwise it shall find its way back through the new colour. LTT Leather Care do a good dye transfer remover kit.


Jonny_

Original Poster:

4,125 posts

207 months

Sunday 23rd July 2017
quotequote all
Fermit The Krog and Sexy Sarah said:
Having not personally used Liquid Leathers products I can't comment on their quality, but they should be OK. I'd maybe Google opinions of their users?

I'd be wary with soap, as it can shrink leather, just so you are aware.

RE the jean stains, you MUST remove this prior to re-colouring, as otherwise it shall find its way back through the new colour. LTT Leather Care do a good dye transfer remover kit.
Cheers, I'll stick to the Liquid Leather cleaner then. Their stuff seems to get good writeups (they're Gliptone by another name).

If the cleaner and brush doesn't lift the staining then I'll try the dye transfer remover, I'm only intending to recolour the cracked areas as opposed to the whole seats anyway.

Winky151

1,267 posts

141 months

Tuesday 25th July 2017
quotequote all
untakenname said:
Rob_R said:
For the cleaning side of things use Pear's soap. Really.

I used it after a tip-off on the M3 Cutters forum; It works a treat.
Cheers, I've just used this on my new (to me) car which has stone leather seats after not having much luck with the cleaning products I had in the garage, resigned myself to paying for a full professional refurb or dye but gave this method a go and it works unbelievably well.

During
[url]

Before and after contrast.
Wow!