Gotta be honest i have done this and had mixed results ... one jacket the arms shrunk back badly and had to have the arms replaced ... one i've documented on another forum and i repost it here as a warning to 'Unbeleewers!' lol
Title - The Death of a jacket... Or 'I've losht it Marcush!'
So ... Here is a tale of woe to fill your hearts with dread. A comedy of errors one might almost say, and being a seasoned 'distressing' monkey I should have known better.... And chosen much more wisely!
I got (had!) a lovely custom Wested Last Crusade a year or three back in standard lamb skin and went through the usual moves of distressing it to my taste .. It's probably the best LC distressing I've ever done ... I showered it off with hot water .. Let it dry then lightly knocked back the relevant LC pattern of distressed areas with wet n dry paper etc .. To be fair it had been a bit neglected as I'm more fond of my TOD's but it got a good few outings under its belt.
Flash forward said couple of years and what follows is a catalogue of woes
Mistake No 1
I decide in my wisdom that I'd like to give it a slightly darker under pallete colour so I get some oil based leather dye and set to it .. End result it's okay-ish but it's knocked the distressing look back almost instantly AND completely and makes it look a bit shiny into the bargain.
Mistake No 2
I then decide I'd rather go back to how it was before so I set at it with some leather cleaner PLUS Hot water etc ...and then go over the distressed areas lightly again to try and bring those back at the very least. Result ... Not much difference.
Mistake(s) No 3 *this is the relevant part!!!!!! The fatal one ....
I make two .. no 3 horrible errors
1/ .. Wash it in the washing machine. Having done this before I know although it works it's not right for an LC as the LC is s distinctly uncrumpled looking jacket with good clean lines and just the distinctive surface distressing. When washed all leather gets mangled and lose their shape to a degree .. that might suit the Raiders or TOD but not an LC or Crystal Skull.
2/ I wash it at 60 degrees ... If you wash a jacket never do it above 30 or on cold ... Disastrous Schoolboy error
3/ The worst.... because the dye is oil based I decide that I need to use detergent! *yep ... i know what you're thinking here
Now given this series of unfortunate events, and knowing what I know ... at this point alarm bells should have been going off Whereas my brain was saying 'what's the worst that can happen?
End result removing the jacket from the machine I knew immediately it was battered VERY BADLY .. I tried to hang it up and it was horribly out of shape .. I lay it flat to pull it back into shape .. It would not go.
Mistake No 4... yes it gets worse!
I hang it up to dry ... Lose patience and put it into the dryer for 30 mins thinking that will help pull it back into shape.
It's still damp. Still horribly distorted and pulled out of shape.
So not able to hang it up due to the extra pulling on already mangled shoulders It gets left laid out on a table in the sun to dry ...
The next day I have a cardboard jacket ... It's not fully dry and already it weighs less than any other jacket I have. Basically the heat and detergent have stunk the life from it .... You know that Star Trek episode with the monster that ***** the salt out of its victims and leaves a husk!
Mistake 5
Ah hah .. Solution ... Re-wet it!!! So it's showered and hung up. Nope ... That fails to do anything .. It's now just DAMP AND THIN ... And out of shape
Mistake 6
The steam iron .... I've used this before to flatten out and reshape leather but in my final moment of stupidity I press the steam button ... The arm of the jacket visibly shrinks under the onslaught ..
So I now have a thin, dry ghastly looking thing with a burnt and mangled arm in place of a once perfect LC...
My next thought takes me to dark territory ..'pecards! .. Pecards ... Now you need to know I hate that stuff. I'll use it on a whip but never on a jacket .. It's just greasy horrible nasty stuff .. It will waterproof your seams but does nothing for leather in my opinion. Several deep slatherings later ....
So now I now have a thin, dry ghastly looking thing with a burnt and mangled arm slathered in grease in place of a once perfect LC.
In the end I wore it to the local Park when I took my son Harrison out. En route I saw the burn on the arm had split showing the lining in several areas ... I poked a finger through ... The sleeve literally peeled apart like paper ... I then put my hand in the right hand pocket and the pocket peeled off the jacket and tore the main jacket panel with it ... On closer examination I realised the entire jacket was able to be peeled apart like wet cardboard ... It's too short life was ended by being dispatched into the park trash ...
So there we are folks ... A lesson in what not to do to a jacket and making a series of drastic moves in an effort to undo ONE poorly thought out action. Let's change the colour a bit ...
It was perfect as it was ... I just wanted to post this here to say even us seasoned jacket wearers do dumb as #### stuff ... For the best of intentions. I know washing jackets is not the thing to do ..
as KT says any glue on seams detaches as does the tape inside the pockets ..
it misshapes the leather
it dries it out.
it invariably screws the lining resulting in that needing repaired or replaced ..
In summary i know this wasn't a case of just washing .. it was a series of errors BUT the fundamental life ending decision was to wash the jacket, and my experience of using it previously and this last factor, would seriously make me shy away from anything as harsh as thrashing any jacket in a machine .. detergent or no detergent .. it just screws it .. I've got four very nice jackets .. two wested and two S&J's and all have had water treatment BUT ... i will never put a jacket in a washing machine again ... EVER! .
I am i might add I'm a big fan of the soaking ..wearing .. soaking again wear while damp .. i think all that really does add to the look but washing in my opinion is just too harsh on the jacket no matter what the hide.