RUINED? How To Fix Over Conditioned Leather Boots
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- Опубликовано: 1 фев 2025
- Can you fix over conditioned, over oiled, over treated boots? The answer is yes, and you likely already have everything you need! Over saturating leather with conditioners and the like is just as bad as not treating them at all. In this video I show you how to reset your boots to (close to) their original condition. Thanks to Smiths All Natural for showing me this technique!
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Reviews of clothing, boots, and accessories for men, along with style advice and life philosophy. I've been working with my hands for my entire life as a mechanic, tow truck driver, and eventually a licensed electrician. Being a blue collar guy, I look for certain elements in a product: is it durable? Is it high-quality? Will it perform well over its service life? Whether boots, pants, jackets, or tools I believe it's best to buy once and cry once by getting the best you can afford. With so many options these days, choosing the best product can become a difficult decision, but that's where I come in. Helping you stay stylish, rugged, and handsome.
I don't care where it's made as long as it's made well, and allows you to buy less and buy better.
somebody send this to Nick at stridewise so he can finally lighten his iron rangers lmao
🤣🤣🤣
😂
Haha
lmao
IKR!!??🤣
The Red Wing clerk recommended mink oil for conditioning my IRs, 6 years ago when I bought mine. It darkens the leather, for sure, but I don’t mind. I actually didn’t even think about it until I saw videos about it this year LOL. I used mine very hard for the first 5 years, every day, on my motorcycle and on job sites with a lot of drywall dust, which sucks the moisture out of leather. I really like the patina that has developed on my pair, but sure, they do not resemble new Amber Harness boots anymore. But they are in great condition and still protect my feet, and are old-school comfortable. I’m just gonna keep using mink oil LOL Thanks for the video Karl-
Channels like this are exactly why I no longer watch over the air, cable tv or subscription apps. This s is EXACTLY what I want to watch, when I want to watch it and the perfect length. 👍
For something a little less aggressive, sawdust seems to do a great job at pulling out excess oils. Found that my Chippewas were noticeably drier and lighter after doing a little post-hurricane tree work. I kept them heavily oiled with Huberd’s since I wanted them water resistant for hiking.
I agree, any type of chainsaw/treework seems to dry work boots out faster than anything with the exception of maybe concrete work. I also use Huberds on all my boots, stuff is amazing. If you use the original grease, try the liquid oil kind, I’ve gotten same results and easier to work with.
I give new boots a super condition with Obenaufs LP. It softens em up for a less painful break in. Then, I wear them until they appear a little dry and the color lightens up, then lube em up again. Rainy, snow wet season, I use Snow Seal. Easy, peezy. Can’t get too technical with this stuff…
I have a ten year old pair of 1907s that I had way over conditioned with Herdeg's Shoe Grease. They were practically black. I have so far done two rounds in the sink with Dawn dish detergent. I think I'm going to try one more time. They are already back to a medium dark brown and seem to be getting closer. Of course I'm resisting the temptation to treat them again! Stand by for updates.
I had a mishap with a bottle of liquid mink oil on my left Red Wing 875, and this video quite literally, saved my pair of boots. THANK YOU!
yooooo same here!! that's why i'm here! i somehow softened up the heel so much that it felt loose after having mink oil on it, so i'm thinking i'm going to try this and hopefully they stiffen up again.
@@heflar literally have the same thing going on, the right heel feels completely loose where it was perfectly fine yesterday, at first I thought it was a manufacturer's defect but now I think I over conditioned the leather
@@xoversa I think mine have tightened up a little over time! I have been using a different leather conditioner on it the doc Martin's stuff and it's been fine.
Thank you. Everyone talks about how to condition leather but not many people talk about how to know when to condition boots or when the are over conditioned.
That's how we used to strip our boots in the Army. A warm bathtub with dishwashing soap, let them sit in the soapy water for a few hours then scrub, and let dry. Good quality leather can take a lot of abuse and most oil-based products can be removed with minimal or no harm to the leather. Currently, I have two pair of Iron Rangers that I condition about twice a year. I don't care so much about color change, but for people that do it's an easy fix. Good video - thanks for posting it!
I just did that to my boots. Thanks for the tip
Nice hints because I've always been worried about changing the color of my boots when I condition them. I like to keep the supple and water resistant, but I don't want to destroy the color that I purchased them in, especially when I buy light colored leather products. Let Smiths know that the video worked, I already purchased some of their balm to test it out. Thanks!
I use Saphier Renovator both on the outside and inside of all my boots.... literally the best conditioner I've ever seen.
I picked up a second hand pair of Redwing 875's and used dawn powerwash and it worked perfectly then reconditioned them.
Thank you for taking one for the team.
All in the name of science!
Thanks Carl! I've wanted to restore two different sets of boots now and now I know how. Love how manufacturers will recommend a conditioner that always ruins the color...
I know right? I think they're going with what they can sell rather than what the tannery recommends.
Carl, I don’t know if you will see this, it’s an older video. Okay, I was in the Navy for 20 years. Pretty much every night I hit my boots with some kiwi black. Anyway fast forward to now, I bought a pair of Nicks Builder Pro steel toes and I have heard everything from oil them every week to wait until they’re screaming for it. I wear them 5 days a week, 40 to 70 hours. I know that they’re designed for guys that consider that a part time job. I work indoors hard surfaces lots of exposure to hydraulic fluid, oil, occasional gasoline etc. I have been brushing them with a nylon brush including the tongue, dressing the edges every week and a very light coat of oil every 2 weeks. Today I scrubbed them and put some nicks boot grease on them. They’re 5 months old, I hadn’t put any of that on them yet. Am I overdoing it? I don’t want to love my boots to death. After 20 years in GI boots one of the first things I did upon retirement was buy a GOOD pair of work boots. Thanks for any help.
This trick worked like a charm. I used dawn as my soap just make sure to not overdue it. You’ll be able to see all the oils and product lift from the leather.
I'm glad you are getting more sponsors and this time around a really useful one. Seeing your channel growing is really great and I'm excited to what you will make videos on in the further. Happy holidays and Merry Christmas!
Glad you did this video... finally received my Nicks Falcons and the recommend Smiths.. naturally I’m researching and you post this video! Thank you for the perfect timing
Great to hear! I must have sensed your Falcons...
The boot force must be strong with you.. lol.. I emailed the pics over to you like I said I would.. Happy Holidays to you and the family
Makes a good beard balm as well, not kidding the same ingredients in that are used in beard balms because they work just as well hydrating and conditioning living skinas well as protecting it from the harsh elements. Only difference is beard balm usually uses essential oils for fragrance
Thank you so much for this. For some reason I got care instructions that said to condition every 1-2 months and I finally got my boots back to the color I loved when I got them. No longer dark dark brown.
Another reviewer @KimballCody did this to his Iron Rangers a few years ago and all the leather experts creeped out of the woodwork.
Some of the most hilarious comments I ever read. I do this to my boots once every 6 months and it works great. Thanks for the video.
Much appreciated!
Yeah, but cody also suggests standing in a bucket of water as a means of breaking in new boots...let's just say "old school" doesn't always mean "best school."...hah..
@@johnwen8810 yeah a tub full of water works better lol
Climb into a tub of water? Well, I guess you're trying to break in new boots and wash a brand new pair of selvedge jeans at the same time...the ol' killin' two birds kinda thing....
@@johnwen8810 lol nah I’ve only had to soak a pair of engineers one time in the tub and walk them dry. That was one pair of boots that I never could tame no matter what I did so I gave them away. I usually do it the hard way for hunting, work or casual boots. Thankfully most boots only take a couple hours.
Great vid. I darkened my Thorogood Roofers and lost that beautiful reddish brown color. Will try this once the Smith's arrives!
I know this is an old video, but I just did this to my first pair of JK boots that I had gone a little too crazy piling up. Worked wonders.
I overoiled my danner mountain horween Rios with huberds, let them sit in oil for a year and a half practically, amazing color and finish... They are past past the severe overconditioning, they feel amazing and the leather holds up to near daily chemicals and solvents hitting the leather. I recommend it for certain cases, only issue is the boots freeze solid, and they sweat in the sun.
Would saddle soap do the same job of removing the build up of oils?
Yup, kinda curious as to why he didn’t use that since it’s specifically for leather, not dishes.
@@StolenAlias Probably because dishwashing liquid (and laundry liquid) are much better at cutting oils
Dawn dish soap does really well because it strips oils but it's not a harsh chemical hints using it on penguins and other animals and of course saddle soap will do wonders stripping oil as well.
Absolutely! Saddle soap is great as a cleaner, dish detergent as the degreaser.
@@CarlMurawski what's the order of operations there bud?
One more question - my riding boots are sharkskin bottoms and calf uppers. What's your suggested routine for going from "thick mud everywhere" to "ok to leave in the closet for a week"?
@@JourdanUrbach just brush off the heavy dirt. You don't need to wash them every time they get dirty. Just brush to dirt off
@@jordanbeyer7607 even if it’s heavy caked-on wet mud? It sort of leaves streaks.
Update, Red Wing boots lose their color rather quickly, so if you go too hard on them with soap and hard brush, they will never be the same again, and you get a difference in color between the left and the right boot. I’ve been there, done that. Now I only use a bit of saddle soap and a soft brush for a quick cleaning 2x a year. After that a bit of Bick 4 and if you live in a wet country, you can protect the leather with Nikwax waterproof. The RW stay the same color, nice patina and no oily dark brown boots that can’t breathe.
Thanks for the video. I bought my first pair of RW IR and I work around bags of concrete… never fails some always bust and just cover my boots. I clean them almost daily because I had always wondered what the dry concrete powder will do to my leather. I never use conditioner just a damp cloth ?
Does over conditioning weaken the structural integrity of the boot leather or merely cause discoloration?
i think the biggest risk is it over softens the leather and causes a boot to break in or stretch too much, but I'm definitely guilty of using a ton of Red Wing oil on my moc toes, and i love the darker look. No issues yet.
The greatest danger in over saturating your boots with heavy oils is that it may prevent the leather from being able to breathe properly. This will lock moisture inside of your boots and could lead to the premature break down of the leather :) Hope this helps!
@@smithsleatherbalm7544 thank you!
I have never had this problem. A heavily conditioned boot usually starts to wear out over time and so I never worry about it too much. I have the oxblood leather Iron Ranger though so it could be that that leather colour is more resilient to conditioning.
The colour has nothing to do with it.
After working with concrete and getting dust everywhere, I once WAY over conditioned my natural chromeexel trench boots. I liked the color darkening, but they looked puffy and felt sticky icky until I cleaned them with automotive interior detailer.
I condition my work boots once every 3 months, very light coat of mink oil and a coat of sno seal and I just brush them daily to get the dirt, mud and sand off. I will also wash my work boots with saddle soap once a year to get any motor oil or diesel and gasoline out of them and then immediately give them a condition with the mink oil and let them dry for a 24 hour period before applying sno seal. Casual or dressy boots I only condition once every 6 months as well and do a brushing after everytime I wear them. Seems to work pretty good for me.
First pair I’m ever conditioning thanx for the warning not to get too crazy on the lotion
Depends what your doing with your boots
@@t-bfr45-70 foot patrol
Those are probably the best looking iron rangers I've ever seen!
Saddle soap can help but for really deep cleaning notjingt like dish soap. Greasy cutter. A good brushes and the leather will drop everything..... The only thing is to re- condition the leather and let dry slowly in a cool place, hurrying the process can crack the leather. I recommend apply conditioner, with wax base like Saphir Cream and/ or oil and leave them outdoors for 30-45 min (sunny day) to let penetrate any substance deeply.
PS: I like the resole! However, the heel do not hurt?
Nope! I think they’re better actually
Smiths is good stuff. I just haven't figured out how much to use. Sometimes I'll use it and it leaves no residue the next day. Other times it leaves a waxy coating on for days. Good stuff regardless.
You have to mix the conditioner before using it .If you leave it untouched for a while then the top will have more hard wax than the bottom .It happens to every conditioner .
Hi Miguel! Thanks so much for using our product :) About the residue you experienced: Leather will not absorb beeswax. Instead the wax will form a thin film upon the surface of the leather until you buff it with a rag or a horse hair brush. If you don't have a rag or brush it will buff itself out naturally after a couple days of use. Hope this helps :) Take care!
How about unused kitty litter? That seems to do a pretty good job of sucking up oils and grease spills from asphalt and concrete. Crush a little up and sprinkle it on the boots let it sit and do it's thing, then brush it off with a stiff bristle brush.
Hi there, I was wondering, do you thing a pass with deglazer could lighten up the over-condtioned darkness as well?
I got smiths leathers balm because of you. Love this stuff.
Im about to put heavy duty lp on my ir hawthornes. I like the look of them when roughout gets dark
so what i gathered is that overconditioning only changes the leathers colour and doesen`t actually hurt the boot, right? so if i have black boots for example i can overcondition them as much as i like?
Well that’s not entirely true. Moisture can weaken the leather somewhat, especially vegetable tanned leather.
Question for conditioning Leather Jacket which is lamb leather. Was quite dry, used a very light coat of Aussie Leather Conditioner by Fiebing's, which worked very well before on many leathers, but this time after a day letting it sit, it came out with quite a big matte finish and kind of waxy feel even though it does not seem to be over conditioned or leaving any oily marks.
Did I use wrong product on lamb leather? Should I try polish or wax it, warm it and wipe or polish, or simply wait a bit longer to see if it changes?
Any suggestion are welcome, Thank you!
I actually didn't know this was a thing until I applied some Bick's HDLP to my boots an hour ago because tomorrow we are supposed to get a light rain/snow mix and I realized the boots were really tacky feeling and seemed to attract dust really easily. Since I'm lazy though I'm not going to wash the conditioner off I'm just going to wear them and the conditioner should over time wear off naturally. At this point though I don't think I'll have to condition my boots for atleast a year.
I overconditioned my right boot when a hydraulic return line blew out and drenched my right leg. Now that boot is almost black and noticeably heavier than my left one. Haven’t had much luck restoring it so far.
I would soak it in a bucket with dish soap and scrub it every so often. It should get all the oil out within a few days. The leather will dry out extremely brittle so be careful when applying oil and don’t wear them for a few days.
I cleaned my iron rangers once with renomat and dishsoap because I had used the wrong conditioner for a long time and the leather was cracking because it didn't do much. Went a bit overboard with the cleaning and then my boots turned yellow when some splashes of water get on there. Really had to grease them up to get rid of that behavior... pretty sure I'm doing all kind of things wrong there lol.
i used a finger nail brush, works great to get in all the nooks and crannies.
That overcondition process, with every type of oils and creams the market has to offer, gave me an heart attack
Hahahaha I’m sorry!!!
Best conditioner for redwing copper rough and tough leather? I've read it's a nappa leather.
Does overconditioning damage the leather at all or is it just aesthetic?
Thats a tricky question, but I'd say that it probably does damage the leather by softening it too much. There are stories of sailors soaking their belts in water when stuck at sea because it would soften the leather enough that they could chew it. yuck....
Great question, David! Oversaturating your boots in heavy oils may prevent the leather from being able to breathe properly which will lock moisture inside of your boots. This could lead to the premature break down of your boots :) Hope this helps!
Carl, use a large horsehair dauber and Dawn Platinum to get rid of unwanted conditioners. A stiff nylon bristle brush is very aggressive and unnecessary. Also, you could apply turpentine to a cloth and wipe the boots down prior to washing. This will really strip them. Best regards.
I think acetone would work well too although tbh it might be too aggressive and take away the color, but I'm not sure.
i like mine oversaturated. with working in the woods mud snow rain etc. its the only way they stay waterproof. i don't know how its bad for them it eventually wears off. good video though. good tips for non work boots
Man I just used Dawn platinum dish soap and my boots Double H went from red brown to a Light tan And very dry boot so what now ..??? Should I used mink oil or leather conditioner… please ASAP..???
Over conditioning? Did I miss something? Are you working in these boots, then who cares!
So is it just about the look or is there damage done to the leather and doesn’t crack or fall apart if over conditioned?
What about saddle soap; how would that work as compared to the method you describe here?
Watches this: “wait, but that’s exactly what I want my leather to do. I like the darker color.”
Well then you’re all set! 👍🏻
Carl Murawski I didn’t realize that people think that oiled leather look was considered “ruined”.
But I totally understand now.
👍
@@freedomsglory1 I literally buy leather products in tan and end up with dark brown after the first lot of Dubbin. I like the depth of colour it gives you.
Adam Dunn exactly.
Leather is such an amazing material.
I don’t like these oversaturated oily boots as they lose all those nice properties like breathing and supporting your feet. For me a little mink oil liquid does the job. Because the most Red Wing leathers are oiled from the factory, they only need a little oil 2 times a year. I use my rough and tough moc toes all year long in the rainy climate of western Europe and they never leaked.
Just so I understand, the only issue that comes with over conditioning is changing the color of the leather? Sorry kinda new to this and im just trying to understand. Doesnt more conditioning mean better water/weather resistances and longer life?
Yes, it does. This is a bit of a non issue if you're a normal person.
Hello , great video ! I noticed the DrSole half sole supergrip and heel ! Great too :)
any suggestions on over conditioning Ariat turbo slip on waterproof mostly in the desert all day around alot of lawn chemicals so I try to rinse them off daily
I've always used mink oil on my leather boots and cleats. My goal was always waterproofing or to reduce shrinking.
I couldn't always devote a day of wearing my cleats after a wet game or practice, so I would scrub the grass and mud off each time, slap a generous slather of mink oil on, and wait. After about 5 minutes wipethe excess off and put them on the boot drier until you had to throw them back in your bag on your way to school in the morning. They'd relax and loosen up by the time warm-ups were done and survive the toe box abuse that a proper fitting cleat goes through between muddy days, as well as be supple after 7 or 8 months of sitting in a closet until soccer season rolls around again.
For my boots, thirsty leather means leaky boots that are quicker to die when fine dirt particles get absorbed into the stitches and seams. Darker leather indicates they aren't thirsty. I found that darkness would fade during the dry months because I wouldn't be doing a weekly scrub of seams and stitching unless they got some kind of nasty on them or I just wanted to spiff them up. In the wet weather they would get hosed daily as needed, cleaned and conditioned on Friday, and maybe some more conditioning on Saturday or Sunday to get a good filling of the grains. I had to catch the bus at the end of a 1/4 mile basalt gravel driveway in the dark while navigating giant puddles most of the school year, barn chores that involved stepping in some kind of poop and urine concoction, and 30 acres of volcanic clay that was exposed all over the place from Thanksgiving until Father's day. Sharp volcanic rock dust, acidic volcanic ash clay, and fecal sludge were what I didn't want settling into my pride and joy yet daily wear Redwings. I mowed so many miles to save up for my first pair of boots and didn't want to destroy them because they were my most comfortable footwear.
I really struggled in the military to get the kiwi wax polish to keep my boots in good condition. Mink oil is what I wanted to use but we were issued kiwi blackening polish pucks in basic for inspection regulations, I didn't even see my beloved Bee Natural Leathercare mink oil on the shelf in any base exchange my whole time stationed in Japan. Glad I don't need a "mirror shine" on my boots anymore, that was so fussy and boots still weren't water resistant let alone waterproof for basic standing water sweepers.
For me, "over conditioned" means I've got life resistant footwear that is going to outlive their sole and every other shoe I own.
Will this method of cleaning the oil from the boots leave the boots stiffer material or will the leather boots still be mushy and very soft
I know this comment is a year old, but cleaning this way would make the boots more dry (as you're removing the oil) which makes the leather stiffer. Depending how much you clean the boot with the degreasing soaps, the effect will be more stronger.
You'd need to re-condition it keep it more supple.
Very interesting video Carl! Love the stormwelt on these iron rangers!
Is there a specific reason you chose dishsoap over saddlesoap? Or is it because everyone has some dishsoap lying around?
I've used saddle soap in the past, and it does a great job of cleaning leather. The dish soap seems to purge all the greases better, plus I like the fact that most people will have this at home already.
In general saddle soap is a much milder soap plus a wax or conditioner. It is meant to clean the leather without "drying it out" (striping out oils) too badly. Here you don't want to clean dirt off, you want to strip oils. So the dish soap plus a light conditioner after would give you better results probably.
I highly recommend Obenauf's Cleanit and Heavy Duty LP.
Is there more to over conditioning than just looks? My 606s are for straight up work, don't care about looks one bit and I want em to last so I oil the heck out of them with mink oil. Is this bad?
Am testing out saddle soap. Can saddle soap remove leather creams and conditioners like dish detergent?
Quick question, what type of laces did you use?
Where are we regarding Saddle soap? I have a pair of Irish Setters that need to be revived
could you use saddle soap rather than normal soap?
The dawn is used as it is a degreaser.
I drown my Chippewas (Cibola 8”) in rice bran oil. In six months the oil is gone and needs to be reapplied making the leather supple and waterproof. I previously used coconut oil and it went rancid and stank. Wouldn’t recomend coconut oil for this reason. Rice bran oil hasn’t become rancid yet after 4 weeks, so far so good.
Is this just for a visual thing? For my work boots I don’t think there is a thing such as over oil
Before I watc, my answer is soap? Then towel it off…I’ve heard saddle soap can be astringent so wouldn’t cleaning it with soap and water then PROPER CONDITIONING work?
If you really use your boots, you probably want too much conditioner in them. As long as they aren't sticky... I like my boots to darken up with conditioner and repel water and dirt. If I overdo it, I'll usually hit them with a hair dryer and clean cloth until the surface isn't sticky.
i work in the woods and have to constantly over do it to keep them as much waterproof as possible. i don't care how they look and darker the better anyway i guess.
Great video. Those look like some good boot laces. What brand are they?
I took enough screenshots to see Mad Dog. Thanks anyway.
I just got new amber harness red wings and spilled water on them and got 10 darkened bits where the water dropets were despite wiping it as soon as i noticed. How can I get rid of them without darkening the boots? I have lexol leather cleaner and bick 4.
How does dish detergent compare to Saddle Soap for pulling out old conditioning/oils/fats?
Where did you get that mug? It's 🔥
I don’t mind the colors darkening, but I cleaned and conditioned for the first time in years and they have the wet look, is it going to mess them up over time or should I not worry about it
I wonder if a leather cleaner would remove all the old conditioners,wax and polish instead of washing with dish soap?
I saturate my boots with mink oil, Redwing boot oil etc and hit it with a hot blow dryer. and I wear mine hard. I have Danners, redwings, whites etc and some of them are 20+ years old. They’re boots. They are there to protect my feet! I never understood vanity in a pair of boots!!!
I’ve wanted a tin of Smith’s since I’ve seen Parker from Stock & Barrel use it. But instead of ordering a can and waiting for it, I just used some hand salve from Burt’s Bee’s.
How does someone over condition a boot ? Did they condition everyday or what ? And waht about acetone ?.. my ostrich boots don't really get over conditioned their tanned honey brown and black.. but I'm about to get some awesome back cherry camion boots !
Besides the looks extreme over conditioning and oiling can start to really ruin your boots because when leather and the whole boots structure get throughly damp with oils it can start to dissolve gluing in sole, toe cup and heel. Great content!
I’m hoping someone can help me out. I’m done scrubbing them out with some dawn. Gonna let them dry. I only have wonder balsam and Bick 4 leather conditioner. Which one should I use?
Have you tried SaddleSoap instead of dishwashing soap ?
Man I’m loving that resole!
Very informative, thanks!
So I have a pair of twisted X boots I’ve tried this with but Im getting this darker and could even say black discoloration. I should also mention that I’m impatient and may or may not have used a hair dryer to speed up the drying process. Could that be what’s causing the discoloration?
what about saddle soap?
Lifesaver, thanks Carl
dawn!!
i put it on and rub it in with my hands , doing it that way sence army 55 years ago
Smart guy you´re Carl.Good video man. Thank´s
Would this work on Iron Rangers that have been overconditioned for years? By that I mean, I have a pair of 6 year old Iron Rangers that have been darkened for years now, ever since I took them into a shop 4 or 5 years ago and they just slathered on the conditioners. I just kind of assumed there was no going back at that point and just accepted that they were going to be super dark and have continued to condition over the years, making them darker. Would doing this lighten them up at all, or do you think the years of conditioning are just way too worked in?
Yes it’ll work, just might have to do it more than once.
Personally, I don’t think you should be worried about your boots changing shades. Obviously do your research and try to get the right materials before you start- but your boots are going to change color over time. Makes your pair more unique.
Absolutely - I want my boots waterproof, not as a fashion statement
I put dubbin on my caterpillar nubuck workbooks. Please help!
Hi Carl, what boots is that?
anyone has tried using the dish soap with degreaser?
how it went?
I honestly like it when my boots darken up.
Dark=healthy
I was wondering myself about the whole premise of this video. He says at the end of the video that "over conditioning" is bad, but why? I personally don't even think there is such a thing.
@@Sifo_Dyas I have noticed the leather is softer after I condition it and it’s more susceptible to getting gouges and scrapes. But it goes away after a while. I use obenaufs leather conditioner btw.
I use obenaufs too. My current boots I only use for snow removal and spreading salt. I apply it thin in layers with a heat gun along the bottoms and primarily exposed areas after using vinegar to strip the salt from the leather, and drying them lightly. I find the heat gun gsts the leather to suck up the conditioner and beeswax Im actually supprised how well these Timberland pro boondocks (vibram sole version) have held up. For just over a year and a half of use, and aren't doing to bad. Not as comfortable as some franks or nicks, but Probably could use a resole after next year I'd bet, if it would be worth it, and as long as they can be. If anything I'd like the safty toe cap to be implemented on a higher quality build down the line, If someone would tackle that kind of a rebuild.
@@ThomasSteed I might try that vinegar trick. I work in a boiler house so I don’t need a heat gun lol.
This reminds me of when I worked in Telecom and they would give us redwings every year, when I went in one year to pick up a new pair they offered to condition the ones I had on. So i handed them over and they proceeded to mop on a half-gallon of some type of oil they had sitting in a heated pot. the boots went from a reddish-brown to basically black. After that, I always conditioned my boots myself. I should have known better than to trust the hipster kid at the red wing shop.
Lol!!!!
Hey Carl! I know this is a lot to ask but do you think you can review the Fison Beartooth camper jacket? Thank you for your time.
I meant filson*
I do the same, but I use saddle soap.