Trouser Bark
Banned
- Messages
- 640
- Location
- Your Cerebral Cortex
Do you think the responses in that interview are objective?I think there's elements of truth in both viewpoints here. Yes, it does contain Chrome (heck, it's even in the name), but with Chromexcel (CXL) specifically, it's incorrect to lump it into the same as any other chrome tanned leather for any purpose except someone attempting to avoid body contact with leather containing chromium.
"I mean, the biggest thing is the chrome content. It tends to be lower."
"I think the range is like, 3% to 6%. Something like that(?)"
An objective reference from NIH states the following:
SourceIn 90% tanneries worldwide, chromium (Cr) (III) salts are used as tanning agents [8,9]. During the tanning process, Cr compounds cross-link collagen fibers. In this process a significant excess of a tanning agent is applied. The unused Cr compounds remain in wastewater and eventually constitute TS [2]. As a result of tanning, the processed material contains up to 3%–4%(w/w) Cr [1]. Such Cr content is typical not only for the final product (leather), but also for all types of TSTW. The presence of Cr is one of the major problems related to tannery waste treatment—it endangers the environment and human health [3,10]. Cr is considered the second most abundant inorganic ground-water contaminant at hazardous waste sites [11].
If Nick says their chromium salts solution is toward the lower end of the industry's standard 3-6% yet the Nat'l Institute of Health states that leather produced worldwide contains up to 3-4%, there's room for clarity. I'm not vilifying Horween as I like their product but this thread is intended to be objective with few unspecific references. There's a place for a conversation between industry friends but probably not here.
it's probably unfair to characterize it as pseudo veg tan process.
I botched a term prior by referring to a generic Chromium tanning process as CXL. Another member referred to CXL as a "combination tanned" product rather than a re-tan or similar. What is your preferred way to represent the abbreviated veg tan process that follows Horween's Chromium tan process?


