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restore red leather saddle- dye or paint?
I have an 80s era red Selle San Marco Regal saddle that has a little more patina than I'd like that I would like to mount on my '81 Marinoni (7400 Dura Ace except I'm cheating with a newish compact Sugino crank- 'cause my legs are old and frail). If it looks "right" it will replace the black Turbo that's there now, I love the Belgian Sofa and garish red seems right for the time period. Does anybody have a clue about how best to restore the color? Leather sites (don't google leather sites, trust me...) say that it depends on what kind of leather-- I have no idea, but it seems closest to auto upholstery leather, in which case the common wisdom is acrylic paint made for leather (also used on shoes and handbags apparently). But there are dyes also that may work better, I dunno. I don't expect or want a like-new finish, but it would be great if I could restore it- it's otherwise in pretty good shape, some expected scuffing around the rear edge but no tears. Advice?
Last edited by zennmotion; 01-23-2019 at 06:12 PM. |
#2
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Rivet saddles offers red leather saddles. Maybe they would have a recommendation for you, or do it for you if you are willing to spend the $?
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#3
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I would go with a dye. I had a brooks light tan saddle that had a painted finish on it and it didn't hold up to the constant polishing. The dye will penetrate the leather and a bottle to do the saddle multiple times is about $8. Do you have a Tandy Leather close to you?
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#4
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Look here: https://angelusdirect.com
I have used the die to change a Regal saddle colour, worked well.
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Marc Sasso A part of the resin revolution! |
#5
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Thanks- I found some good leather suppliers online, the problem is the large number of product choices, I'm sure better than a brick and mortar. You may be right with paint durability, that's my sense as well. But Brooks leather and the thin covering on a San Marco are very different leathers, I would choose a dye for a Brooks for sure. But I'm not sure how well dye would penetrate the old coating on the Regal. I have a local artisan shoe maker/ leather goods guru who would definitely do a good job if it could be done, but I'm not sure it would be worth his high cost, and I'm kind of looking forward to a DIY as I've done for everything else on this bike (including the wheels that I built and raced on more than 35 years ago that are still true ) |
#6
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Have you considered getting it recovered instead or dyeing the saddle?
One of the forum sponsors, Recovered Cycling, does just that. He recovered a couple saddles for me and I was extremely satisfied, in both price and quality.
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http://hubbardpark.blogspot.com/ |
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What about Fiebing's dye? It sounds like it may work.
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Also, I'm not doing saddles anymore. Happy to consult though.
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Cuero - Fine leather cycling gloves - GET SOME |
#14
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Thanks- but the world will miss your saddle work! Any advice on the best product to restore the color? I'm thinking I might try a dye first, and then still have the option for paint if it doesn't work well. Paint seems like go for broke, if it looks bad no going back to dye. It occurred to me that the only time I see what color the damn saddle is, is when I'm not riding the bike- so I may be overthinking this, it's winter...
Last edited by zennmotion; 01-25-2019 at 11:27 AM. |
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I have no idea on colorfastness though. Sent from my LG-H931 using Tapatalk
__________________
Cuero - Fine leather cycling gloves - GET SOME |
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