Leather Care Guide
Your Filmswear jacket is a genuine leather investment. Follow this expert guide to clean, condition, store, and protect it — so it lasts decades, not seasons.
🧥 Why Leather Care Matters
Genuine leather is a natural material — it breathes, absorbs moisture, and responds to its environment. Unlike synthetic fabrics, leather does not simply wear out; it transforms over time. With the right care, a full-grain leather jacket develops a rich, personal patina that makes it more beautiful with every year of wear.
Without care, even the finest leather will dry out, crack, fade, and lose its structural integrity. The good news is that maintaining your Filmswear jacket takes very little time — a few minutes every few months is all that separates a jacket that lasts a lifetime from one that deteriorates within a few seasons.
We craft every jacket to be a long-term companion — not fast fashion. The Hollywood characters who wear these iconic looks don't treat their leather as disposable, and neither should you. This guide gives you everything you need to keep your jacket at its very best, year after year.
🏆 Care Requirements by Leather Tier
Each of our three leather grades has slightly different characteristics and care priorities. Understanding your tier helps you give your jacket exactly what it needs.
🧴 Cleaning Your Leather Jacket
Cleaning leather is not like cleaning fabric — water and harsh chemicals are leather's enemies. The goal is to remove surface dirt and oils while preserving the leather's natural moisture balance. Follow these methods by soil level:
Light Surface Dust — Dry Wipe
For everyday dust and light surface debris, use a soft, dry microfibre cloth. Wipe gently in circular motions across the entire jacket. This should be done after every few wears to prevent surface dust from working into the grain. No products needed — this takes 60 seconds and preserves the leather's natural surface finish.
Surface Grime & Fingerprints — Damp Wipe
Dampen a clean microfibre cloth with distilled or cold tap water — never hot. Wring it out thoroughly so the cloth is barely damp, not wet. Wipe the affected areas gently. Do not scrub. Allow the leather to air dry naturally at room temperature. Once fully dry, apply a small amount of leather conditioner to the cleaned area to restore moisture balance.
Stubborn Marks & Scuffs — Leather Cleaner
For deeper stains or scuffs, apply a dedicated pH-balanced leather cleaner to a soft cloth — never directly to the jacket. Work in small, gentle circular motions on the affected area only. Remove residue with a clean dry cloth. Always follow with a leather conditioner after cleaning to replace moisture stripped during the cleaning process. Test any new product on a concealed inner area first.
Deep Clean — Professional Leather Service
Once a year — or after any significant soiling event — take your jacket to a specialist leather cleaning service. These professionals have the tools and expertise to deep-clean, recondition, and restore leather without damaging it. This is especially valuable for Tier A full-grain jackets, where the natural surface must be treated with expert precision. Never send leather to a standard dry cleaner.
- Household detergents or washing-up liquid — strip the leather's natural oils and cause cracking
- Alcohol-based cleaners, hand sanitiser, or acetone — remove dye and surface finish permanently
- Baby wipes or antibacterial wipes — contain chemicals that damage leather grain over time
- Bleach or any whitening products — irreversible discolouration guaranteed
- Washing machine or dishwasher — destroys leather structure completely
- Tumble dryer or radiator drying — causes severe cracking and irreversible shrinkage
💧 Conditioning — The Most Important Step
If there is one single care habit that will most extend the life of your leather jacket, it is regular conditioning. Leather is skin — and just like skin, it needs moisture to stay supple and prevent cracking. Every time your jacket is cleaned, exposed to rain, or stored for a long period, it loses moisture that must be replaced.
- Ensure the jacket is clean and fully dry before applying conditioner
- Apply a small amount of conditioner to a soft, clean cloth — never directly to the leather
- Work in gentle circular motions, covering the entire jacket surface including seams and back panel
- Pay extra attention to high-flex areas — elbows, collar edges, and underarm panels — where cracking begins first
- Allow the conditioner to absorb for 15–20 minutes, then buff off any excess with a clean dry cloth
- Hang the jacket on a wide hanger and allow it to air at room temperature for at least 2 hours before wearing or storing
The best conditioners for Filmswear jackets are lanolin-based or beeswax-based leather balms — they penetrate deeply without leaving a greasy residue. Avoid silicone-based conditioners, which sit on the surface and can eventually suffocate the leather grain.
- Tier A (Full-Grain): Every 3 months — or immediately after rain exposure or cleaning
- Tier B (Top-Grain): Every 4–6 months during regular wear seasons
- Tier C (Genuine Leather): Every 6 months — use a light balm, not a heavy conditioner
🌧️ Water, Rain & Weather Protection
Genuine leather handles light rain well — especially when properly conditioned — but prolonged exposure to moisture can cause water staining, swelling, and long-term structural damage. Here is how to protect your jacket and recover it if it gets wet.
- Light rain: A well-conditioned leather jacket will repel light rain naturally. Wipe dry with a soft cloth afterwards and allow to air dry — no further action needed.
- Heavy rain or soaking: If your jacket gets thoroughly wet, shake off excess water and hang immediately on a wide hanger at room temperature away from any heat source. Allow to dry naturally over 12–24 hours. Do not use hairdryers, radiators, or tumble dryers under any circumstances. Once fully dry, apply conditioner to the entire jacket.
- Water stains: If water dries and leaves tide marks, dampen the entire affected panel lightly with distilled water using a clean cloth — this evens out the drying. Let it dry fully and then condition.
- Waterproofing spray: A leather-specific waterproofing spray (beeswax or silicone-free formula) applied once every 6 months provides excellent protection for jackets worn regularly in wet climates. Apply to a clean, dry jacket and allow to absorb fully before wearing.
- Apply direct heat — hairdryer, radiator, open fire, or direct sunlight to speed drying
- Store the jacket folded or packed while still damp — this causes permanent creasing and mould
- Wear the jacket again while still damp — wet leather stretches out of shape under body weight
🗄️ Storing Your Leather Jacket
How you store your jacket when you're not wearing it is just as important as how you clean it. Poor storage — folding, cramming into tight spaces, or leaving in direct sunlight — causes permanent creasing, fading, and moisture damage.
- Store on a wide, padded hanger — narrow wire hangers create permanent shoulder dents in leather
- Keep in a cool, dry, ventilated space — temperature around 18–20°C, humidity around 45–55%
- Use a breathable cotton garment bag for dust protection — never a plastic cover or sealed bag
- Keep away from direct sunlight and artificial UV light — fades colour and dries out leather rapidly
- Ensure the jacket has space around it — compressed against other garments causes permanent crease marks
- Store fully zipped or buttoned to help the jacket retain its shape over time
- Folding or rolling the jacket for storage — creases set permanently in leather
- Storing in a plastic dry-cleaning bag — traps moisture and causes mould and mildew
- Leaving near a heat source — boiler, radiator, or in a hot car — causes irreversible drying and cracking
- Storing in a damp basement or garage — moisture causes mould growth inside the lining
- Hanging on a hook by one shoulder — distorts the collar and shoulder structure over time
🌦️ Seasonal Care Calendar
Your jacket's care needs change with the seasons. This calendar gives you a simple, actionable routine for each time of year to keep your leather in peak condition year-round.
📅 Complete Care Schedule
Use this quick-reference schedule to keep your care routine on track. Pin it, screenshot it, or set a calendar reminder — your jacket will thank you.
🛒 Recommended Product Types
We do not endorse specific brands, but these are the types of products that work best with genuine leather at all three of our quality tiers. Look for these formulations at your local leather goods retailer or online.
| Product Type | Tier A | Tier B | Tier C | Frequency |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Leather Cleaner | Full-Grain Formula | Standard Formula | Standard Formula | As needed |
| Conditioner | Premium Balm | Standard Conditioner | Light Balm Only | 3–6 months |
| Waterproofing Spray | Beeswax Spray | Beeswax Spray | Standard Spray | Every 6 months |
| Professional Clean | Leather Specialist | Leather Specialist | Optional | Annually |
| Dry Cleaning | Never | Never | Never | — |
🔧 Common Problems & How to Fix Them
Even with good care, leather can occasionally develop issues. Most common problems are reversible if caught early. Here is how to address the most frequent concerns our customers encounter.
- Surface scratches and scuffs: Minor surface scuffs on smooth leather can often be buffed out with a soft cloth and a small amount of leather conditioner. Work in circular motions with light pressure. For deeper scratches, a leather colour restorer pen in the matching shade can make them nearly invisible.
- Dryness and cracking: Early-stage dryness shows as a dull, slightly stiff surface. Apply conditioner immediately and massage deeply into the affected area. Repeat after 24 hours if the leather is still absorbing. For cracking that has already set in, a leather repair kit with a flexible filler may be needed — consult a leather specialist for significant damage.
- Mould or mildew spots: Remove the jacket from storage immediately and take it outdoors or to a well-ventilated area. Wipe mould spots gently with a cloth slightly dampened with a 50/50 mix of water and white vinegar. Do not soak. Allow to dry fully, then condition. Identify and fix the storage moisture issue before returning.
- Colour fading: Light fading from sun exposure is natural but can be slowed with regular conditioning and UV-protective storage. A leather colour restorer or re-dye product in the original shade can refresh significantly faded jackets — always test on an inner seam first.
- Sticky or tacky surface: Usually caused by silicone-based conditioner buildup or heat exposure. Wipe the jacket thoroughly with a clean damp cloth to remove surface residue. Allow to dry fully, then apply a lanolin-based conditioner to restore balance.
- Stiff or rigid feel after storage: Normal after long-term storage. Wear the jacket for a few hours — body heat and movement will naturally soften the leather. Follow with a conditioning treatment to accelerate the process.
If your jacket has significant damage — deep cracking, large mould patches, colour loss across an entire panel, or structural issues with the lining — do not attempt aggressive home repair. A specialist leather restoration service can work wonders, and the cost is almost always far less than replacing a quality jacket.
📬 Care Questions? Ask Our Team
Have a specific care question about your Filmswear jacket? Not sure which conditioner to use or how to treat a particular stain? Our team replies to every message within 24 hours, Monday to Saturday.