is westeds dark brown the thinnest and most fragile leather?
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Never go back into the 'old' posts and use some of those bits of information when it comes to sourced materials, expecially when it comes to leather. Sources dry up, and tanneries close, requiring manufacturers to find new sources and companies that sell it.
I don't know of many items for sale today that are still made with the same materials that we had available 6 years ago.
Regards! Michaelson
I don't know of many items for sale today that are still made with the same materials that we had available 6 years ago.
Regards! Michaelson
Michaelson wrote:Never go back into the 'old' posts and use some of those bits of information when it comes to sourced materials, expecially when it comes to leather. Sources dry up, and tanneries close, requiring manufacturers to find new sources and companies that sell it.
I don't know of many items for sale today that are still made with the same materials that we had available 6 years ago.
Regards! Michaelson
That makes a lot of sense Michaelson. My new Wested lamb is considerably nicer quality than one I owned in 2003. It could be just me but I think it's different leather. Higher quality in my opinion.
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A lot is fuss is made about the durability of different kinds of leather. By durability do you mean longevity, abrasion resistance, or tear resistance?
The thickness of leather has little to do with it's tear resistance. Kangaroo is a thin leather, yet naturally tough. Kevin Costners pants in "Waterworld" were covered with fish skin (Universal Studios uses fish skin for their stunt show!). The animal, the tannage, and the finish have everything to do with durability, not thickness.
Leather hides constantly changing. The hides vary within the same production run, they vary from season to season, and year to year.
Enough lecture from me about leather. Perhaps instead of speculating about "which leather is tougher" it would be wiser to judge by reports of leather failing. The truth is, not many people rip their jackets (percentage-wise).
The thickness of leather has little to do with it's tear resistance. Kangaroo is a thin leather, yet naturally tough. Kevin Costners pants in "Waterworld" were covered with fish skin (Universal Studios uses fish skin for their stunt show!). The animal, the tannage, and the finish have everything to do with durability, not thickness.
Leather hides constantly changing. The hides vary within the same production run, they vary from season to season, and year to year.
Enough lecture from me about leather. Perhaps instead of speculating about "which leather is tougher" it would be wiser to judge by reports of leather failing. The truth is, not many people rip their jackets (percentage-wise).
Todd is absolutely correct in this. Each leather type has general characteristics, but a hide is not a hide, depending on all the variances that Todd mentioned.Puppetboy wrote:A lot is fuss is made about the durability of different kinds of leather. By durability do you mean longevity, abrasion resistance, or tear resistance?
The thickness of leather has little to do with it's tear resistance. Kangaroo is a thin leather, yet naturally tough. Kevin Costners pants in "Waterworld" were covered with fish skin (Universal Studios uses fish skin for their stunt show!). The animal, the tannage, and the finish have everything to do with durability, not thickness.
Leather hides constantly changing. The hides vary within the same production run, they vary from season to season, and year to year.
Enough lecture from me about leather. Perhaps instead of speculating about "which leather is tougher" it would be wiser to judge by reports of leather failing. The truth is, not many people rip their jackets (percentage-wise).