Use it and wait. :)
Best wishes,
Bob
Any top tips please.
Use it and wait. :)
Best wishes,
Bob
Patina takes time, for example, a ww1 strap acquires it over time, you can't just recreate that.
I used emery cloth on one to dull it,just don’t go to far with it.
Then I rolled it around wet in my palm wet,let it dry then polished it.
Wear it, use it, take care of it (clean it with a damp cloth and air dry periodically). Let the wabi sabe happen.
Trying to fake it will likely just end up looking faked, and the wearer’s credibility will suffer. Just my 2p.
I roll straps several times and the apply Redwings boot oil. This softens, waterproofs, and gives the strap a patina. If you do this once a week for a month or so your strap will look aged but not faked.
Attach it to the back of a car on a rainy day, head off up the motorway, should do the trick.
My understanding of wabi sabi is not that it reflects imperfection as a result of use, but rather the imperfection is in the creation. So, the difference between a pot that isn't perfectly round and has some rough edges, and a pot which started as perfectly round with no rough edges, but which got a chip in it. (For some value of "perfectly round.")
It may be a slightly different story if the orginally perfectly round and smooth pot with a chip is repaired and the repair is apparent. (Again different if the "repair" is designed in.)
An interesting case is a pair of jeans with designed in holes in the knees. Wabi sabi? I wouldn't think so. The jeans are designed to look worn, not to reflect the imperfections associated with life.
Best wishes,
Bob
Last edited by rfrazier; 17th May 2019 at 08:10.