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Reviewed in the United States on March 8, 2025
Fast shipment
Customer
Reviewed in the United States on March 6, 2025
excellent for leather sofa
J. Lavold
Reviewed in the United States on February 20, 2025
I like the finish on the the leather surface!!!
Customer
Reviewed in the United States on January 5, 2025
Great cleaner and conditioner for leather on my motorcycle and jackets would highly recommend
Mrs. F
Reviewed in the United States on July 27, 2024
This product makes my twenty year old leather furniture look and smell brand new. It has kept my furniture in great shape all these years. I have tried many other leather cleaning products. Mr. Leather is by far the best.
Sam
Reviewed in Saudi Arabia on January 19, 2024
very good but it smells bad
NCB
Reviewed in the United States on July 17, 2022
I bought Mr. Leather because my leather love seat had "oily hair" darkened discolorations on the headrest sections. Mr. Leather was very easy to spray on and wipe off. I cleaned the entire loveseat with the product. Now my loveseat is cleaner and the leather is very pliable. But, the headrest stains are still there and the shine that was originally on the entire loveseat is gone. It has a dull finish now. Overall, I don't think this product was the correct one for my purpose.
Willie V. Hughes
Reviewed in the United States on June 7, 2015
In my opinion, using Lexol's cleaner and then following with Lexol's preservative is probably best for truly cleaning, conditioning, and preserving real leather, but who has that kind of time? Or that kind of leather? Most leather today-- whether you realize it or not-- is actually painted and more synthetic than cow hide. An exception to that rule would be gun leather (like belts and holsters) or horse tack & saddles. Ask your local cobbler or leather repair shop if you have any doubts about this. It's simply become cheaper for shoe companies, furniture makers, and leather jacket companies to use painted leather than to truly dye the leather with pigments. Also, even luxury car makers have now opted for synthetic faux-leather seating surfaces (they all give this fancier names than "vinyl"). Sure, they keep real leather around because people *think* they like luxury leather ("Corintian leather!") but synthetics are more UV resistant, durable, and easier to clean and keep clean.Meguiar's is good for simply wiping down a leather surface, eliminating light dust or dirt, and leaving a nice shine, but not so great for removing actual grime or stains. I settled for Mr. Leather because it seems to be a quick, no-nonsense way to clean and move on. I'm not in to detailing my car like I was when I was 16 or 17. I've got three bottles of this stuff stashed around (gave one to my girlfriend for her leather couches). In my opinion, it's the best happy medium for cleaner/preservative. Also, I actually have a mixture of leather (my couches) and simulated leather (car seats). Mr. Leather seems to do the best at cleaning both and making them look nice.One last thing: What really sold me on this product, caused me to order two more bottles, and to write this review, is that I couldn't remove some dog slobber stains from the leather/vinyl on the rear doors of my car until I used this. A few sprays on a rag, some elbow grease, and now the interior of my car doors looks as-new!
R. LaRue
Reviewed in the United States on August 24, 2012
This product appears to be nothing more than a scented "silicone protectorant." In other words, it's basically Armor All, with a leather smell added. The aroma is that of whatever it is that new, highly-tanned leather in a leather shop smells like. It's a very good imitation, and actually smells quite nice.I used it on two black leather motorcycle jackets that had become covered with mildew in a dark closet. I cleaned off the mildew with alcohol, but there was still a musty smell and staining on the jackets.The Mr. Leather did a good job of eliminating the stain. (Whether it just hid it it or actually removed it, I can't say.) The product also left the jacket smelling a lot less musty and with a bit of that new-leather scent. It also left no artificial shine like the original Armor All does; but it does leave the leather slippery. (Over-spray will also leave any surfaces it touches slippery too, so use newspaper over your work surface.)I also used the Mr Leather on a pair of mildewed black leather motorcycle boots--this time without using the alcohol first. The results were about the same.In short, this stuff can clean off mildew and eliminate mildew stains on black leather, and also somewhat mask any residual musty smell with an authentic new-leather scent.I think it's worth the money over the cost of a similar-sized bottle of conventional protectorant (like Armor All) for the leather smell as opposed to a silicone smell. I'd give it 3.5 stars.
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