Can distressing your gear actually be good for it?
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- Mark Brody
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Can distressing your gear actually be good for it?
I just got my gloves yesterday , and I spent this evening "distressing" them so they aren't so white. It may not be the best job in the world, but I found that a combination of black and brown shoe polish applied unevenly followed by a good dose of Lexol leather conditioner (while wearing the gloves, and rubbing your hands together as though washing them) was a very simple process, and I didn't even need to abuse them.
I'd bet that with a little patience, you would distress a lot of gear without actually harming it - especially the leather gear.
I'd bet that with a little patience, you would distress a lot of gear without actually harming it - especially the leather gear.
IMHO Distressing is just "speeding up" the aging process.. and well you are bound to distress it just by using your gear.. therefore it's WELL OKAY!
I like the way you distressed your gloves. I've never thought of using shoe polish but I can see how it would work on distressing the gloves without making them splotty.. great job!!!
Nati
I like the way you distressed your gloves. I've never thought of using shoe polish but I can see how it would work on distressing the gloves without making them splotty.. great job!!!
Nati
- Indiana Joosse
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- Michaelson
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Me too, and usually one good afternoon of that makes a pair of gloves look like the photos above. ;-)
Distressing is just the appearance of regular wear and tear on an item. When something is 'pre-distressed', it's just had accelerated wear applied to a new item.
So, the obvious answer would be 'no', it not exactly 'good' for any item when done artificially, but that's the choice of the owner.....natural wear, or accelerated wear.
Regards! Michaelson
Distressing is just the appearance of regular wear and tear on an item. When something is 'pre-distressed', it's just had accelerated wear applied to a new item.
So, the obvious answer would be 'no', it not exactly 'good' for any item when done artificially, but that's the choice of the owner.....natural wear, or accelerated wear.
Regards! Michaelson
- Michaelson
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So was I: that was the part of "I agree with Michaelson" ;-)Michaelson wrote:I never said it would. I was answering the subject title question, which was:
"Can distressing your gear actually be good for it?"
Remember? ;-)
Regard! Michaelson
The rest of it was kind of complimenting on finding a non destructive way to get that distressed look. very creative IMO
Actualy, come to think of it I don't think this is distressing at all not actual distressing anyway....
Regards, Geert
For some folks there really isn't a choice. If you live in an apartment in the city and don't really need to wear gloves for daily activities then distressing is really the only way to get a used/worn look on a costume item.
I'm not really agreeing or disagreeing with anything. Just adding a comment.
Really nice looking gloves there by the way.
I'm not really agreeing or disagreeing with anything. Just adding a comment.
Really nice looking gloves there by the way.
- Michaelson
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Understood. Guess you should have placed a period after your 'I agree' statement, as your 'but' continuation begged a question that I was not replying to, as I said.gwyddion wrote:So was I: that was the part of "I agree with Michaelson" ;-)Michaelson wrote:I never said it would. I was answering the subject title question, which was:
"Can distressing your gear actually be good for it?"
Remember? ;-)
Regard! Michaelson
Your comment implied an agreement with conditions. ;-)
Regards! Michaelson
- Michaelson
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- Mark Brody
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I'd actually much rather have just used them to do yard work, but like you said - I don't really have any yard work to do. I already had the black and brown shoe polish laying around, as well as the leather conditioner. It all just kinda made sense.Cammer wrote:For some folks there really isn't a choice. If you live in an apartment in the city and don't really need to wear gloves for daily activities then distressing is really the only way to get a used/worn look on a costume item.
I'm not really agreeing or disagreeing with anything. Just adding a comment.
Really nice looking gloves there by the way.