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Re: Fixing cracking and flaking leather

Hi guys, not sure if this has been posted, I was searching for ways to fix leather, but couldn't find much results. So I wanted to share what I tried, I hope that it can be useful to others.

So I received a HT Catwoman from a friend, the leather boots and gloves looked pristine inside the box, but as soon as I took it out, it flaked to the touch. I haven't been collecting for very long, but I think I've heard a few collectors at some point has had some bad experiences with the leather on other figures.



So here's the method I tried:


(Sorry for using headphones as an example, I freaked out when the leather on the figure peeled and forgot to take pictures. The result was exactly like this)

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This is after everything was stripped off completely, I used an old rag to rub them off, as the leather material was thin and already crumbly, it came off without much force.[/FONT]

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For paint, I used Black acrylic paint (Carbon Black in my case) mixed with Liquitex fabric medium and diluted with water. The fabric medium helps the paint to become more flexible, able to stretch a bit, lowering the risk of cracking paint.



In my case, I've painted around 15-20 coats, the first few coats were a bit difficult, as the fabric soaked up all the paint, and took very long to dry, but after the material was thoroughly saturated, the latter coats were easily applied, the drying time significantly reduced.


These are the results:
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Depending on the finish, you can achieve different looks, in my case the fabric medium has added a slight glossy finish to the black paint, too much gloss and it may look like shiny latex material. So I added a light coat of clear matte, to dull down the shine a bit, but not too much, otherwise it'll look rough like paint on a canvas.


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For me, I'm quite satisfied with the results, posing and bending around the joints are fine, although, the gloves and boots are a little more rigid and stiff, but does not hinder articulation at all.

Hope you find this helpful, thanks for looking :)
Thank you :)

Me neither, I only found out recently, when I stumbled onto a site about painting t-shirts with acrylic paint. So I tried test-painting two pieces of scrap cloth, one with the medium, and one without. With the medium, the cloth was less stiff and more flexible. Still, they advised to avoid extreme stretching.

The guy I got this from said he never opened the box, while it's true, I'm not sure about the conditions he stores them in. I hope yours is unharmed :)
Same problem happened to me already few years ago with that wonderful pleather jacket from the HT Salvation John Connor. :-(

If, as stated, that Catwoman was kept inside the box, what are the chances that box was kept in a dungeon, soaked in air humidity...?
It is not a storage problem, but a bad pleather problem, or even worse, just an oxygen-unavoidably-destroying-good-pleather problem.

I do have a still sealed HT Selina Kyle, and I fear what awaits me the moment I move to a bigger house and finally get to display my Catwoman.

Painting clothes is not my thing. I guess I'll have to buy some new eventually crumbling pleather parts.
Pleather and rubber: the Final Frontier in the 1/6 hobby. Why don't they use real leather? They could get it for cheap from animals sacrificed for the meat industry. On the other hand, does that Phicen silicone really hold for a very long time?

Looks great. Of course it's flaking because it's not real leather.

The flaking pleather came off pretty clean. In that case, I would have
just covered it in real leather. That way you wouldn't have to worry
about stretching or flaking ever again.

But that's just me.
How would you do that? Real leather has to be extremely thin for this application, right? Even if you gut it to be that thin, you would still have to completely remove the pleather, even the non-flaking part that Fox915 painted on. Quite a chore, isn't it?

m.
 
The fabric medium mixed with acrylics is indeed great, and it's my go-to method for both fabrics and faux leather for 1/6 figures. I've also fixed a scrape on the pleather on the Tbleague Painkiller Jane boots by simply coating the damaged area with clear, uncoloured fabric medium.
 
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