

but sometimes it is better to leave it alone rather than to risk damage with a treatment when you know nothing about the long term affects it might have. What you put on is likely to be hard if not impossible to get off. I just know that is is always better to be informed about what you are trying to accomplish, leather treatment and the products used is a pretty in depth study. I have read about leather treatment for more hours than I care to count and it still does not make me any kind of expert. One other point to consider is that microbes that cause deterioration need food and bees wax is a feast for these little buggers. You simply cannot put ANYTHING on light colored leather without changing the color. Neil now looks near new without any color change. To say it is bees wax and "nothing but" is misinformation. Snow Seal must have some thinners or a disolving agent to make it the consistancy of peanut butter. I have several balls of bees wax here in front of me and it is hard as a golf ball unless heated. I find this hard to believe.I have seperated honey from it's wax and the wax I got was much different than snow seal. Niel says: Sno-seal is bees wax and nothing but.
