Anyone has some suggestions? Thanks in advance!
May I be the voice of reason and say that no one is going to notice it when you’re wearing the jacket? It’s hidden behind the neck. Do you plan to take the jacket off and hang it on the back of a chair (to call attention to the chipped top coat) or something? The jacket won’t be looking new forever, it’s meant to have wear and tear (hopefully not the latter) eventually.
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I mean that is very true. It is just my first jacket, so i want to make sure i take care of it
Oh cool, I didn’t realize 4-coat was an acrylic sealer.. sounds like you’ve got it covered! Good luck, and sweet jacket!Thanks for the feedback!
Can't tell which finish it is, it's beck666 from Toys Mccoy, https://www.thefedoralounge.com/threads/toys-mccoy-beck-666.107444/
I got an alcohol based dye so it will penetrate better. The 4-coat is an acrylic based sealer so it should also work well. If those two combined don't work well, I will try an acrylic based black paint.
I fall victim to this as well…. With any new jacket, the first scratch drives me bonkers, especially if I’m the one that scratched it(same with motorbikes and guitars). Once it gets a few more bumps and bruises, I stop caring and start appreciating the character.Congratulations, your jacket has earned its first patina and show the actual Teacore—what it is intended to show! Now you can wear it with pride.
There are stories of guys all over the forum that tried to fix their relatively new jackets after a scratch or a discoloration, ended up making it a lot worse, and had to sell the jackets eventually. Don’t become one of those guys. Leather jackets have high durability and are meant to be used and abused. You don’t need to “take care of it” like a suede or lambskin jacket. The more you think and worry about it, the more the jacket owns you instead of you owning it.
This is definitely not patina. In this forum it is quite common to use this word for scratches and wear but it patina it is not.Congratulations, your jacket has earned its first patina
This is definitely not patina. In this forum it is quite common to use this word for scratches and wear but it patina it is not.
John Lofgren Monkey Boots Shinki Horsebuttt - $1,136 The classic monkey boot silhouette in an incredibly rich Shinki russet horse leather.
Grant Stone Diesel Boot Dark Olive Chromexcel - $395 Goodyear welted, Horween Chromexcel, classic good looks.
Schott 568 Vandals Jacket - $1,250 The classic Perfecto motorcycle jacket, in a very special limited-edition Schott double rider style. Allow me to disagree, patina is something totally different that scratches, it has nothing to do with semantics or linguistics.is just a game of semantics here.
Absolutely, I also get nervous at the first scratch at any new jacket or pair of shoes but I forget about it at the second scratch.What’s important is that there will be more scratches with this jacket in the future, and he should just wear it and enjoy it
Patina and scratches are two different things. Maybe not to you but they are to @Harris HTM and everyone else.What’s patina and not patina (to you) is just a game of semantics here.
If you mean it in the same way that a shearling jacket is called a "b3" or a nylon flight jacket is called a "ma1" then I guess you can interpret "patina" as you want. But patina is patina.‘Patina’ is one of those words that can mean different things to different people.
No it is not. Wear and tear are of mechanical nature. Patina is due to environmental (actually chemical) processes.Personally, I think patina is the wear and tear
The last two photos are brilliant. You can also see the patina on the brass zipper rivetsHere's my mid 40s Californian, the sleeves show a combination of wear (a part of the topcoat having been worn off) and patina (accumulation of dirt, body oils).
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Semi aniline Shinki, showing darker spots (patina) at the hem where body oils have accumulated from my hands touching the leather when zipping up the jacket.
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