How do I get dish soap out of leather?
February 4, 2012 11:14 AM
how to get dish soap out of a leather backpack. also, :(
I bought a jar of dish soap in bulk, and was so excited. I brought it home and of course it smashed (all over two brand new books, books with school notes, wallet, 3 old national geographics...).
Anyway, the dish soap has done surprisingly little to everything else, but my backpack is now soaked with dish soap. It's a brown leather backpack (roots, if that detail makes any difference). I know it seems kind of dumb to worry about soap staining something, but it seems like it might damage the leather...
Anything I can do to get it out without just causing the entier thing to foam up? Should I even wet it or just let the whole thing dry out?
Thanks, hive mind!
I bought a jar of dish soap in bulk, and was so excited. I brought it home and of course it smashed (all over two brand new books, books with school notes, wallet, 3 old national geographics...).
Anyway, the dish soap has done surprisingly little to everything else, but my backpack is now soaked with dish soap. It's a brown leather backpack (roots, if that detail makes any difference). I know it seems kind of dumb to worry about soap staining something, but it seems like it might damage the leather...
Anything I can do to get it out without just causing the entier thing to foam up? Should I even wet it or just let the whole thing dry out?
Thanks, hive mind!
After you get it rinsed out, use some saddle soap. It cleans and restores leather and softens it.
posted by halfbuckaroo at 2:43 PM on February 4, 2012
posted by halfbuckaroo at 2:43 PM on February 4, 2012
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When it's dry, you need to moisturize the leather because you just washed all the oils out of it. You have a couple of options here. You can rub your pack down with a heavy coating of mink oil. One leather expert I know recommends rehydrating washed leather with cheap hand lotion. I have also used Dr. Martens Wonder Balsam for this purpose with good results. Whatever you use, keep applying until it takes a long time to be absorbed by the leather. The leather may be stiff for a little while (especially if you don't get all the soap out) but it should return to its normal state with enough moisturizing treatment and use.
I'm not a leather fetishist. I'm a track day rider and recovering roadracer, so I've stunk up and washed a lot of leathers.
posted by workerant at 1:38 PM on February 4, 2012