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Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Leather Dye in Black Color

By Hispanic

Do you think dyeing leather items like your ratty old leather couch or beat-up high school leather jacket a pain in the bottom? Well, you're wrong. Dyeing leathers isn't only very easy to do, it's also quite rewarding. Dyeing leather can serve as a fountain of youth for your old leather items. It's also a practical thing to do, for leather is naturally durable and reusable; the only sign of age and wearing for leather is its fading color, and leather dyeing can easily solve that. Dyeing leather can be an aesthetic in its own right. For example, imagine your home dcor changing for one reason or the other, and all of a sudden you've ended up with an emerald couch and a burgundy wall. Instead of going through the trouble repainting your wall, how about just taking advantage of the aesthetic powers of dyed leather and dye your couch into a black couch that can fit in any part of your house?

Going back, dyeing leather isn't very difficult. Like everything else, there's a trick to it. Prepare your leather first; all the "finish" should be taken out in order to get the best outcome possible. Then it's the dye's turn to be prepared. Afterwards, keep in mind that you shouldn't dye your leather item black from the start. It's advisable to start with a lighter color, then work your way up with progressively darker colors before ending up with black. Just to give you a better idea, imagine you have a white couch, and you want to dye it black. Start with a color darker than white, like say green. After you dye it green, progress to an even darker color; dark blue, for instance. Once you've passed through the 'topcoats' of your dye, then that's the only time you should dye the leather black. Why is that? Because without the other layers of dye, your leather item might not end up as dark as you want it. By dyeing it with progressively darker colors, you get a richer, blacker black you're looking for.

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