I've been looking for a pair of Chameleon leather door cards for a while and took the opportunity to buy a pair recently which looked solid enough but had a very poor door handle repair carried out on the driver side.
They were also going to need recolouring from Topaz Blue to Black.
Close-ups of that horrible repair. Very, very hard glue not just in the immediate area of the handle fixing point but smeared carelessly all around it too.
I had no real idea of whether I was going to be successful in cleaning the glue off. But I figure it was so hard I stood a chance of chipping/flicking it off with a scalpel at the risk of removing the top layer of leather or hopefully just the dye/sealant.
So with great care and 3 hours later I arrived at this. Note the leather has also been well but carefully (as the embossing can get removed) rubbed down with Furniture Clinic Leather Prep. This not only prepared the leather for recolouring but removed the smeared glue too. Phew...
The door handle was also carefully chipped away at. This had also been covered in glue around the edge.
Attention then turned to the plastic trim strip. I had more difficulty with this and although I came close to cleaning it up I couldn't get rid of the smears and small traces with the Leather Prep like I did on the leather inserts. So I finished off with 1000 grade scotch pad. And in fairness I was close to leaving it there. But in stronger light the loss of sheen to the area in question would have noticed.
So I tried out some TRG Super Colour Black leather/plastic/vinyl spray. I'd heard good things about it. Firstly rubbing the whole strip down with the 1000 scotch pad.
First coat very speckly. Firstly because any spray paint looks like that after a mist coat. Secondly the paint is meant to have a slight texture.
And then built up over 5 coats to this. It's good but I'm disappointed it's picked up some dust but probably more importantly it looks too glossy. It's supposed to be satin. Here it is compared with an original. I've emailed the supplier to see what I can do to tone it down. They do a matt refinishing lacquer but that may be too flat
At the moment I'm going to give it 7/10. The Furniture Clinic leather dye by comparison I rate 9.5/10.
More updates to come when I recolour the leather. And re-assemble the door.
They were also going to need recolouring from Topaz Blue to Black.
Close-ups of that horrible repair. Very, very hard glue not just in the immediate area of the handle fixing point but smeared carelessly all around it too.
I had no real idea of whether I was going to be successful in cleaning the glue off. But I figure it was so hard I stood a chance of chipping/flicking it off with a scalpel at the risk of removing the top layer of leather or hopefully just the dye/sealant.
So with great care and 3 hours later I arrived at this. Note the leather has also been well but carefully (as the embossing can get removed) rubbed down with Furniture Clinic Leather Prep. This not only prepared the leather for recolouring but removed the smeared glue too. Phew...
The door handle was also carefully chipped away at. This had also been covered in glue around the edge.
Attention then turned to the plastic trim strip. I had more difficulty with this and although I came close to cleaning it up I couldn't get rid of the smears and small traces with the Leather Prep like I did on the leather inserts. So I finished off with 1000 grade scotch pad. And in fairness I was close to leaving it there. But in stronger light the loss of sheen to the area in question would have noticed.
So I tried out some TRG Super Colour Black leather/plastic/vinyl spray. I'd heard good things about it. Firstly rubbing the whole strip down with the 1000 scotch pad.
First coat very speckly. Firstly because any spray paint looks like that after a mist coat. Secondly the paint is meant to have a slight texture.
And then built up over 5 coats to this. It's good but I'm disappointed it's picked up some dust but probably more importantly it looks too glossy. It's supposed to be satin. Here it is compared with an original. I've emailed the supplier to see what I can do to tone it down. They do a matt refinishing lacquer but that may be too flat
At the moment I'm going to give it 7/10. The Furniture Clinic leather dye by comparison I rate 9.5/10.
More updates to come when I recolour the leather. And re-assemble the door.