Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Probably cured and tanned in China. God only knows what kind of awful chemicals they use over there. Probably full of lead, arsenic and formaldehyde.
Properly tanned leather should have a sweet smell.
Is there ANYTHING the damn Chinese can’t f#ck up?
ALL leather tanning uses terrible chemicals. I work with hazardous waste and most companies aren’t even able to take the fleshings, etc.
Unless you’re buying vegetable tanned leather (which is a very small percentage of US leather), you’re getting all the chemicals you listed above. The chemicals from vegetable tanners still include things like sodium hydroxide and ammonia.
As I know DCUM loves a reference:
https://www3.epa.gov/ttn/chief/ap42/ch09/final/c9s15.pdf
Anonymous wrote:Probably cured and tanned in China. God only knows what kind of awful chemicals they use over there. Probably full of lead, arsenic and formaldehyde.
Properly tanned leather should have a sweet smell.
Is there ANYTHING the damn Chinese can’t f#ck up?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Very overpowering smell. Any clues for getting rid of the smell or will it eventually stop?
Is it leather or is it fake leather? One thing is the surface material. Leather usually stop smelling after some time,
the fake leather is fake through and since it is made from petroleum then it is slowly of gassing the entire life of the furniture.
What is inside? Is it natural materials or plastic foam? Some foams are made from horrible stuff. I once bought an IKEA matrass that had something inside that would smell like worse chemicals for some two months in an empty room with an open window and not getting any better. Back it went.
Anonymous wrote:Very overpowering smell. Any clues for getting rid of the smell or will it eventually stop?