Leather: is this fixable?

Leather: is this fixable?

Author
Discussion

Some Gump

Original Poster:

12,863 posts

193 months

Thursday 25th January
quotequote all
Hi forum!

Interested in the forum collective knowledge - do we think this is recoverable?




Context:
Leather.
Italian leather...but not the good kind.
The Fiat Crysler kind.


I can sort of think how water / hairdryer combo might pull it back, like my old karting gloves. I can also see it might be simply knackered for all eternity, because it's an FCY product..


sherman

13,811 posts

222 months

Friday 26th January
quotequote all
A decent detailer should beable to get that out.
Probably even a mobile one that will come to you.

Robertb

2,076 posts

245 months

Friday 26th January
quotequote all
Should work… worth an go, and you’ll be unlikely to do any harm with a hairdryer if you keep checking the surface temp with your hand.

Rough101

2,286 posts

82 months

Friday 26th January
quotequote all
Assuming it’s not from America, Fiat group leather is usually miles ahead of VW or BMW.

Hairdryer should sort that out I think, or the leather man who uses a proper heat gun, which of course is a disaster in the hands of a beginner

Alex_225

6,667 posts

208 months

Friday 26th January
quotequote all
I remember talking to a leather repairer I used on a couple of cars and asked him about stretched leather. He said a lot of people will suggest heat which may pull the leather back to shape but it's usually temporary. This was me asking about the stretch on my old Merc S Class seat.

I'm not sure if that's genuine or man made leather so could try a hair dryer on it and see if it tightens.

I'm guessing from a car seat?

Dannbodge

2,207 posts

128 months

Friday 26th January
quotequote all
I read that using a steam cleaner can also help

Tankrizzo

7,524 posts

200 months

Friday 26th January
quotequote all
If the forum did tagging I could tag PHer Fermit in this, as he has some experience in this area I believe.

Some Gump

Original Poster:

12,863 posts

193 months

Friday 26th January
quotequote all
Thanks guys!

It’s not my car, it’s a pic from an advert that for a car that looks interesting - but I’d want to know it was fixable because otherwise it’d do my head in!

sherman

13,811 posts

222 months

Friday 26th January
quotequote all
Some Gump said:
Thanks guys!

It’s not my car, it’s a pic from an advert that for a car that looks interesting - but I’d want to know it was fixable because otherwise it’d do my head in!
As a worst case scenario you can probably get a replacement seat back .

Louis Balfour

27,657 posts

229 months

Friday 26th January
quotequote all
Some Gump said:
Hi forum!

Interested in the forum collective knowledge - do we think this is recoverable?




Context:
Leather.
Italian leather...but not the good kind.
The Fiat Crysler kind.


I can sort of think how water / hairdryer combo might pull it back, like my old karting gloves. I can also see it might be simply knackered for all eternity, because it's an FCY product..
No experience, but I am itching to get some steam on that. Damp towel and an iron. Do a small patch first.


h0b0

8,143 posts

203 months

Friday 26th January
quotequote all
Similar car seat marks in my car simply went away on their own after a summer of warm days and use.

Summit_Detailing

2,007 posts

200 months

Saturday 27th January
quotequote all
That will be recoverable with some time spent with a hairdryer and some massaging with fingers.

Cheers,

Chris

Geffg

1,232 posts

112 months

Saturday 27th January
quotequote all
h0b0 said:
Similar car seat marks in my car simply went away on their own after a summer of warm days and use.
Same here when I used to use car seats. Although the middle ones look quite bad.

grumpynuts

997 posts

167 months

Wednesday 31st January
quotequote all
Another vote for steam.