Can you color a leather sofa to another color minus destructive the sofa.? I wonder what is the real color of leather, I see adjectives...
I wonder what is the real color of leather, I see adjectives kinds of colors surrounded by leather sofas, and I wonder if there is any path one can re color a leather sofa without wounding the sofa itself, I mean that, it would come out looking great. Well do you spray it, use a pint brush, what could one do??
Answers: You MIGHT, but trust me, you don't want to. Leather dyes are toxic, toxic, toxic. Did I mention they be highly toxic? You would involve to get a good-quality commercial dye, remove the sofa to a separate, but okay ventilated nouns, get yourself some expensive respiratory equipment, and at most minuscule 5 gallons of very, deeply, very expensive dye. Did I mention that leather dye is deeply expensive? Leathers are vat dyed, and hand-dying would probably leave profusely of streaks and uneven spots. And depending upon the finish, much of the leather in recent times might not take the stain. You would wipe the stain on near a soft cloth wearing serious (blue) gloves. And, I'm not sure the exact date (it might have already passed), the EPA demanded change in leather dyes, and yes they are smaller quantity toxic...but the colors aren't as fast, they rub stale, bleed, spills show up, and if your legs are sweaty, you'll pick up the dye, it will absorb into the skin (your skin is leather that hasn't be tanned yet), and move marks on your sofa. There used to be a spray on the souk, but it never really soaked in, lately lay on top, dried out the leather, cracked, flaked, and generally be only well-mannered if no one be actually going to use the leather. Just because in that are leather shoe dyes out there (whole different animal, so to speak), don't believe this can be translated to a leather sofa.
If it sounds like I am trying to dissuade you from it, very well, that's because I am. May I suggest a colorful throw, instead?
To answer your question roughly the color of leather, that depends upon the animal, the area the skin is taken, and how the leather is split. Natural leather ranges from a waxen cream/buff to a light coffee.
I wouldnt do that if i be you