Okay so those shoes I bought need to some help looking fine again. What do I need to bring the leather back to life?
I am not sure they can be totally made wearable, but if you can find some cadillac boot and shoe care.....it is a conditioner that works very well. If you cannot find it, I guess the next best thing would be some lexol. It must be a thin conditioner so it can soak into the leather. You will need to literally pour conditioner into those shoes, try to drown them. Let it soak in for over night, use your hand and get some up into all areas all around the entire inside of the shoes. Do the same on the outside. Put conditioner on them like they are on fire and the conditioner will put the fire out. Seriously. I would avoid even moving the leather, bending it.....let is soak up conditioner for some time. You can rub the leather to try to rub the conditioner in....but I would be careful to not bend the leather for a few days. You will know the shoes will feel soft and pliable....the leather will feel soaked rather than dry. Let them sit soaking. Apply conditioner. If I had those shoes, I would use one complete bottle on them. They will use that much at least. You will be amazed at how dry leather can and will soak up conditioner. if you do all this, THEN shove some shoe trees in the shoes. See how they look then. Check the rear seam of the ankle of the shoe. Make sure all that has not "collapsed" from someone not using a shoe horn while putting the shoes on. If nothing is ripped or split and you can use some shoe trees and tighten it up and pull some of the wrinkles in the top of the shoes....then wipe them off and polish. Wipe the insides as well. Take some pictures please and post them here. I would love to see what happens after you have done all this and see what the results have been.
Leather can last more than a hundred years IF it has been conditioned properly.
I love old victorian boots. BUT most of them the leather has actually decomposed some place on the boots, the most common place around the lacing areas. I recently purchased a pair that had never been worn, at least a hundred years old. They fit great and I thought I could condition them enough to wear....but all near the lacing area inside the boots, the leather was so bad, it would simply crumble if I laced them up. I will post some pictures later.