Leather seats in a car are not only beautiful, but can be very durable too. Part of good car care practice is keeping it looking nice. Lets see how we can do that. I always remember taking a tour of an east coast tannery that specialized in leather interiors for some of the world's finest luxury cars. Everything from Lexus to Lincoln interiors were made there. In all, there were 38 steps that the hides went through from softening them by tumbling in Cyprus barrels with a caustic soda mix for 24 hours, to the final spraying on of the colorant.
Here is where Car Care Company would like to give you advice on the restoring of the car's interior.
This should be done once you have carefully looked over the car and decided what it is going to need. The most logical place to start is the interior. Begin by removing the seats and pull up the carpeting, assuming that there is carpeting still left in the car.
The upholstery may be salvageable. Reupholstering a car seat can take quite a bit of work and should be done correctly. You are going to need the same type of material that was used in the original upholstery, such as vinyl, leather or fabric. In many cases, you will need vinyl.
OK what could it be? Yep, it's that pesky fog build up on the inside of your windshield and you just cleaned it off last month. What is causing this stuff to keep coming back? Remember how I said this was not a problem in the old days? Well back then they didn't have vinyl dashboards and windshields that are the size of football fields. In fact they had steel topped dashboards with a little hint of vinyl padding on the frontal edge.