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13th September 17, 11:06 AM
#1
Back in my days in the Marine Corps, Leather Luster was one of the things that would get you into more trouble than anything else. I looks good when first applied but does not allow the leather to breath and is a royal pain to touch up or remove well enough to let you spit shine properly afterwards. You could always tell the young Marine who had tried it and failed. The shoe never looked good afterwards.
The Leather Luster company does sell a remover but I have never seen it used successfully.
If this cantle has been treated with Leather Luster I would suggest contacting a leather worker and asking them to duplicate a new one.
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13th September 17, 02:58 PM
#2
IMG_9025.jpg
 Originally Posted by Steve Ashton
Back in my days in the Marine Corps, Leather Luster was one of the things that would get you into more trouble than anything else. I looks good when first applied but does not allow the leather to breath and is a royal pain to touch up or remove well enough to let you spit shine properly afterwards. You could always tell the young Marine who had tried it and failed. The shoe never looked good afterwards.
The Leather Luster company does sell a remover but I have never seen it used successfully.
If this cantle has been treated with Leather Luster I would suggest contacting a leather worker and asking them to duplicate a new one.
Thanks for all your suggestions. I came across this image today on the internet. It's someone selling a WW1 Gordon Highlanders sporran. Looking at the cantle, the same thing has happened to this leather. To apply the leather lustre, would the badge not have to be removed first and then put back on? This would surely be a pain - to remove and re secure those fiddly cotter pins. I'm just not sure.
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13th September 17, 03:34 PM
#3
Leather military sporran cantles of that type from the late 19th/early 20th century if they haven't been properly maintained, turn out with what you have. Moisture has most likely damaged that one and I don't think anything can really bring it back to the original look without disassembling it. I have two, one from the Boer war era that has always been taken care of, and one from the 20's that got wet and not dried properly and is in just a tad better shape than yours. Getting the badge off and on is extremely difficult as you surmise, not fun at all. I highly doubt that is liquid lustre on it, that's more of an American shortcut than British.
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13th September 17, 11:02 PM
#4
 Originally Posted by 48HofC
Leather military sporran cantles of that type from the late 19th/early 20th century if they haven't been properly maintained, turn out with what you have. Moisture has most likely damaged that one and I don't think anything can really bring it back to the original look without disassembling it. I have two, one from the Boer war era that has always been taken care of, and one from the 20's that got wet and not dried properly and is in just a tad better shape than yours. Getting the badge off and on is extremely difficult as you surmise, not fun at all. I highly doubt that is liquid lustre on it, that's more of an American shortcut than British.
Thank you. This is very helpful.
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14th September 17, 06:51 AM
#5
I couldn't say whether Leather Luster is at play here, but something sure is. To be blunt, this is not simply the result of old leather. I have a lot of military leather items dating well back into the Victorian era, and none of them display this kind of surface effect. This has to be the result of "something" that was put on the surface of the leather which has likely dried up and shrunk over time, then cracking and/or taking on the shape of anything that was pressed against it. And again, in the latest sporran photo, I don't see any brittle leather flakes or any signs of the actual leather showing through. This is all surface finish/treatment of some sort, which has not aged well.
Without knowing what it really is, and wanting to try to restore it (with the understanding that it may just have to be replaced entirely), I'd start with various chemicals to remove it gently and try to get it back to the original leather. Alcohol, naphtha, lacquer thinner, acetone, etc. Try each one with a cotton boll and see if it has any effect.
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14th September 17, 07:09 AM
#6
Looking at the picture I thing the question should be it is worth saving? There is a good chance that it would be more affordable and better looking to replace the cantle even if it can be saved. I would agree with others that this damage is most likely from what was used on the leather, most likely in an attempt to "help" the leather look better, and this kind of damage might not be worth the effort in the long run.
If I were you, I would take off the cantle and use it to make a pattern for a new cantle. There are may places where inexpensive leather pieces large enough can be found. The stitching is a saddle stitch, and I would advise using a high strength thread or leather sinew for the stitching. I would probably also replace the tassel tops on the sporran so that they look better with the new leather.
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