Subject: Japanese leather
Susan L. Maltby <susan.maltby [at] utoronto__ca> writes >I am currently investigating early interior finishes for an 1889 >building. A period newspaper article describes the walls as being >covered with "Japanese leather". This is a term that I am not >familiar with. I've checked through some 19th c. leather tanning books and found nothing except references to Japanned finishes (linseed oil, pigments, etc. to give a glossy finish). H.R. Procter's 1936 book, The Principles of Leather Manufacture gives one short reference: "... the white Japanese leather used for brace tabs is produced with rape oil." p. 461 Braces are another term for suspenders. There was one other brief reference in another book to alum tawed Japanese leather. So, it appears that either a black or a white leather may have been used in the 1889 interior.... There was another reference to tanned Japanese frog skins. Jack C. Thompson Thompson Conservation Lab. 7549 N. Fenwick Portland, Oregon 97217 503-735-3942 (voice/fax) *** Conservation DistList Instance 15:52 Distributed: Thursday, January 24, 2002 Message Id: cdl-15-52-003 ***Received on Wednesday, 23 January, 2002