Guppy
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 4,339
- Location
- Cleveland, OH
Dry cleaning is not a dry process. Your jacket with be placed in a WET chemical bath so I don't see the benefit of letting a stranger soak your $1,000 garment in chemicals when you can achieve the same result from a cold water wash. We're talking cleaning here. And the only thing you may want to clean is the liner pits. The leather just needs an occasional wipe down. Dry cleaners won't guarantee your jacket won't shrink. I've read account after account of folks washing their jackets full immersion in the shower or bathtub to get the liner clean with no ill results. Mild soap and cold water. Tumble it in a dryer in a sack with the heat off if you are in a hurry to break it in.
Dry cleaning for wool and other "dry clean only" garments isn't the same process that they do for "professional leather cleaner only" garments. It just happens that the businesses that do one type of cleaning often do the other, because it's convenient to their customers.
There's no better way to screw up a leather jacket than to give it to someone else to care for in some unspecified way that you don't understand. But a good leather expert will do wonders for a jacket that needs TLC. If you know how to do it yourself, you can save quite a bit of money, plus get to spend quality time with your jackets, which makes them even more yours.