Does anyone have tips for removing water-based glue from denim? Following instructions on the bottle I used warm soapy water, but this just took 1/2 of it away.
1st thing which comes to my mind would be to do just what I did for one of my 1st projects and that is to do a search on YouTube for "making a leather shop apron". It will save you having to wear clothing with spots on them from glue, dyes, and all the other liquids we use in our leather craft projects.
I see the humor in your "joke" [no smilies needed], but you must realize that when I made MY apron, it was one of the 1st things I actually made from scratch which required a bit of planning and ordering enough materials to do the job. At that time, Phillip was most likely still in grade school and YouTube hadn't hit the spotlight, in fact it was well before the "internet" was developed! Now here is the "rest of the story", I borrowed a shop apron from a woodworker friend of mine and came up with a set of "measurements" based on how HIS factory apron was built and how I wanted MY apron to fit. Nothing fancy, just a few adjustments here and there to have my apron fit like I wanted HIS apron to fit on me. That was when I was a teenager and wanted to make some horse tack, which I found in one of the very BEST books on leather braiding by Bruce Grant.
Now I am 81 years old, retired since 2008 after a lifetime of owning and operating my 2 businesses, and I still LOVE the smell of leather! And I am still a "student" of leather crafting since I picked it back up about 11 years ago. I am still a "hobby" leather crafter, but now I am building holsters, sheaths, other tool covers and holders as needed in my leather shop, and I have turned to using exotic inlays and special leathers for my exterior covers on pistol holsters and knife sheaths, wallets, business card holders, and any other item which someone may need built as a "custom" made item. I don't own a sewing machine, preferring to saddle stitch almost all of my products or using other stitching styles including box joints and butt joints for making things just a bit above the normal level of commercial products in today's retail world. And I am going to return to my "Encyclopedia of Leather Braiding" [a treasured 1st edition hardcover BTW] and pick up on more modern braiding techniques using kangaroo skin instead of latigo lacing, which I had made from "rounds" of veg tanned leather and hand skived on a homemade skiving knife, one of many handmade tools which I learned to build from seeing how the "old timers" of MY youth made their tools.
And in closing, it is the wise man who checks out the facts of a story first, before making assumptions. Otherwise one may find himself the brunt of the old saying sometimes attributed to Abraham LIncoln, "Better to remain silent and be thought a fool, than to speak and remove all doubt".
Aside from my humour, that you are sure as hell allowed to not enjoy at all, I was trying to find a gentle and kind way of noting that you were being a little bit rude.
We all know youtube exists (and we are all aware that not all youtube knowledge is good/right/makes sense) but here we are on the Leathercraft Mastercall forum; and what you did is akeen to going into a Mercedez Benz showroom, finding a random client there and telling them "Go buy a BMW, they are better" in front of the owner.
I apologize if it sounded like i personally attacking you, it was far from my intention.
Now, let us put all of this behind us and have a great day!
Yeah you're definitely going to have a spot there to forever remind you about that one time you dripped because you put a little too much on the spreader and decided to glue stuff sitting down and bringing it off the edge of the table to avoid getting glue on the table. Wait that's me, but yeah whatever is left is there to stay unfortunately.
From past experience, it is doable, just will just have to sacrifice your denim to do it. You will have to rub so hard, you will massacre the denim fibers.
You'd have to have the reaction time of a mongoose to get that stuff out of demin after a mishap. As soon as fabric pulls the moisture out, it irreversibly turns to rubber, usually neoprene.
If it hasn't been worked in, crepe rubber should pull it out the fibers by force. Some solvents such as naptha, toluene or acetone can melt it, but I cant imagine the denim will like that.
1st thing which comes to my mind would be to do just what I did for one of my 1st projects and that is to do a search on YouTube for "making a leather shop apron". It will save you having to wear clothing with spots on them from glue, dyes, and all the other liquids we use in our leather craft projects.
Yeah you're definitely going to have a spot there to forever remind you about that one time you dripped because you put a little too much on the spreader and decided to glue stuff sitting down and bringing it off the edge of the table to avoid getting glue on the table. Wait that's me, but yeah whatever is left is there to stay unfortunately.
From past experience, it is doable, just will just have to sacrifice your denim to do it. You will have to rub so hard, you will massacre the denim fibers.
In short, nope.
You'd have to have the reaction time of a mongoose to get that stuff out of demin after a mishap. As soon as fabric pulls the moisture out, it irreversibly turns to rubber, usually neoprene.
If it hasn't been worked in, crepe rubber should pull it out the fibers by force. Some solvents such as naptha, toluene or acetone can melt it, but I cant imagine the denim will like that.