Leather


Leather in Africa has potential

Africa is our youngest and fastest growing continent. The African leather industry has huge historical significance and big potential for growth in the 21st century. Growth that is essential to provide the jobs that all countries with expanding populations must have. Tanning hides is mostly capital intensive but subsequent stages require increasing amounts of labour, in […]

Group tacit knowledge

Being embedded in a welcoming community and working in the right atmosphere is part and parcel of retaining the craft of tanning and producing fine products using leather. We see it in France and Italy with the luxury goods industry. In the wider leather industry, the craft still applies as all leather produces goods designed […]

A positive atmosphere in the tannery

Leather is at a crossroads. If it allows itself to be seen as a commodity, it will lose ground to synthetics. If it reasserts its craftsmanship, it will remain a valued, premium material. The headline quote is from a recent book – Abroad in Japan – when a factory owner moved his production 1,000 miles north in […]

APLF becomes a pivotal moment

I miss going to APLF. I was at the first back in 1984 and it coincided with my first trip into China when we went by train to visit a tannery in Guangzhou. Apart from the year my father died, I attended them all up to the pandemic. Trade fairs in the leather industry each […]

Recovery or growth, is there a choice?

My resolution for 2025 for my ILM comments is to try and think a bit differently and remember that the more you learn. the more you need to learn. That element of reflection appears to be what is needed at this moment in the leather industry. After surviving the Covid-19 pandemic, there was every reason […]

COP29 Leather Manifesto

A Manifesto for Leather on the occasion of COP29 Buy better, buy less, buy leather Consumption is one of the key drivers for man-made climate change. Consumers are driven to want more, buy more and ultimately discard more and more products, many of which are of poor quality, have short life spans and are designed […]

Strong statement from Textile Exchange on how they will define leather

In their November 1922 Newsletter, the Textile Exchange how they would in future define leather. This is the definition the leather industry has been using throughout the 20th century and on, but has failed to enforce. Italy recently passed a new law supporting this approach and Brazil did so as far back as the 1960s […]

Times change

For those who watch this website and in particular the blog you may have noticed that below the waterline quite a lot has been happening. I have been steadily trying starting to update some parts of the website and to improve the ease of reading. A new timeline for gloves has been introduced and will […]

Leather was first made a million years ago.

I took this photo of Roy Thomson in 2013. He had just been awarded a PhD by the University of Northampton for a thesis entitled “The role of leather science and technology in heritage conservation”. Sadly he passed away on Monday 14th June 2021. He had completed the leather degree at Leeds University some nine […]

Leather through the ages

Note: I wrote this in 2003 but the area it covers means I have not updated it, only corrected a few spelling and grammatical errors. It is a short read that I hope everyone finds interesting. Leather in ancient history was an important material.   It was functional in a multitude of uses from armour to a […]