After an accidental cooking oil spill in the canteen at work I found myself with horrible dark oil blotches on the side of one of my 405 boots. I initially tried both talc and leather degreaser to remove the marks but to no avail.
Being a new member here I trawled the forum for ideas of what I could do and am pleased with the results I have achieved drawing from all your wise words!
My first move after the leather degreaser (which faded the stains a little but also started to remove colour) was to try Alden dark brown boot cream to try and darken the boots up a little and hopefully hide the stains. Initially I found the boot cream a little uneven so after the application I then cleaned the boots with a lexol cleaner wipe followed by a lexol conditioner wipe. This evened out the colour a fair bit and also brought the stitching back out as well. It gave the boots quite a nice antique look but alas the stains, although now a bit more subdued, still shone through.
I decided my next move was to go down the obenauf's leather oil route. I had seen some examples by you guys on here of the darkening results the oil has achieved so I figured I'd fight cooking oil with leather oil!
And I'm glad I did! Not only am I happy that the cooking oil stains no longer stand out but I'm happier with the new colour of the boots.
Here are the boots pre-staining
Here are the dastardly stains
And here is the end result after all of the processes
Without the help of this forum I would still probably be looking down in disappointment at the stains, so thanks everyone for all the useful tips and tricks on here!
Cooking oil spill on Alden 405s
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- lankywookiee
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Re: Cooking oil spill on Alden 405s
Looks great!
Keep in mind, Lexol is a water based condition/cleaner, so you were, indeed, fighting a losing battle with an oil based stain.
You chose the right route.
Regard! Michaelson
Keep in mind, Lexol is a water based condition/cleaner, so you were, indeed, fighting a losing battle with an oil based stain.
You chose the right route.
Regard! Michaelson
- lankywookiee
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Re: Cooking oil spill on Alden 405s
Thanks
You're quite right, just using the lexol would have been pointless for the stains, it made no difference to them at all!
I did find the lexol evened out the Alden boot cream quite nicely and brightened up the stitching after the boot cream darkened them way too much though so at least a little good came out of using it.
You're quite right, just using the lexol would have been pointless for the stains, it made no difference to them at all!
I did find the lexol evened out the Alden boot cream quite nicely and brightened up the stitching after the boot cream darkened them way too much though so at least a little good came out of using it.
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Re: Cooking oil spill on Alden 405s
The darker color is very nice. Glad that worked out for you.
Regards,
Indiana Jeff
Regards,
Indiana Jeff
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Re: Cooking oil spill on Alden 405s
Hey! I saw these a while back and always wanted to ask how they are looking now. Did the color stay dark like that? I have a new pair that are quite orange and I wanted to darken them up without the stitching changing as well.lankywookiee wrote:After an accidental cooking oil spill in the canteen at work I found myself with horrible dark oil blotches on the side of one of my 405 boots. I initially tried both talc and leather degreaser to remove the marks but to no avail.
Being a new member here I trawled the forum for ideas of what I could do and am pleased with the results I have achieved drawing from all your wise words!
My first move after the leather degreaser (which faded the stains a little but also started to remove colour) was to try Alden dark brown boot cream to try and darken the boots up a little and hopefully hide the stains. Initially I found the boot cream a little uneven so after the application I then cleaned the boots with a lexol cleaner wipe followed by a lexol conditioner wipe. This evened out the colour a fair bit and also brought the stitching back out as well. It gave the boots quite a nice antique look but alas the stains, although now a bit more subdued, still shone through.
I decided my next move was to go down the obenauf's leather oil route. I had seen some examples by you guys on here of the darkening results the oil has achieved so I figured I'd fight cooking oil with leather oil!
And I'm glad I did! Not only am I happy that the cooking oil stains no longer stand out but I'm happier with the new colour of the boots.
Here are the boots pre-staining
Here are the dastardly stains
And here is the end result after all of the processes
Without the help of this forum I would still probably be looking down in disappointment at the stains, so thanks everyone for all the useful tips and tricks on here!
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Re: Cooking oil spill on Alden 405s
Hey, look at that. New Indy boots, and at a fraction of the cost!
- lankywookiee
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Re: Cooking oil spill on Alden 405s
Hi Capt. Blumburtt!Capt. Blumburtt wrote: Hey! I saw these a while back and always wanted to ask how they are looking now. Did the color stay dark like that? I have a new pair that are quite orange and I wanted to darken them up without the stitching changing as well.
They stayed dark but the reddishness has slowly crept back through over time. Here's a couple of pictures of their current state...
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Re: Cooking oil spill on Alden 405s
I read the title of your thread and thought, that's no big deal, just treat the boots in leather oil.
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Re: Cooking oil spill on Alden 405s
Hi Capt. Blumburtt!lankywookiee wrote:Capt. Blumburtt wrote: Hey! I saw these a while back and always wanted to ask how they are looking now. Did the color stay dark like that? I have a new pair that are quite orange and I wanted to darken them up without the stitching changing as well.
They stayed dark but the reddishness has slowly crept back through over time. Here's a couple of pictures of their current state...
Wow those turned out really well! I love that color. It encourages me to do the same. Thanks!