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A buyer's guide to Italian leather

Vegetable-tanned, chrome-tanned, full-grain, top-grain: what each term means and when to specify it.

When you brief a leather project, two decisions shape almost everything else: the grain of the leather and the tannage. Get the vocabulary right and your quote, your lead time, and your finished product all become more predictable.

Grain: which layer of the hide

  • Full-grain — the outermost layer with its natural surface intact. Shows the hide’s real markings, breathes, and develops a patina. The most durable and the most premium.
  • Top-grain — the surface lightly sanded and corrected to remove imperfections, then finished. More uniform, slightly less character.
  • Split / “genuine leather” — the lower layers of the hide left after the top is separated. Cheaper, weaker, often heavily coated. “Genuine leather” is a low bar, not a compliment.

Tannage: how the hide becomes leather

  • Vegetable-tanned — tanned with plant tannins over weeks. Firm, warm-toned, ages beautifully, holds structure. The Tuscan tradition. Slower and costlier.
  • Chrome-tanned — tanned with chromium salts in a day or two. Softer, more colour-stable, water-resistant, less expensive. The majority of the world’s leather.

Neither is “better” in the abstract. A structured tote may want vegetable-tanned firmness; a soft hobo may want chrome-tanned drape. Many bags use both in different parts.

Other terms worth knowing

  • Saffiano — a cross-hatch texture pressed into the surface with a protective finish; scratch-resistant and structured.
  • Suede / nubuck — the flesh side (suede) or buffed grain side (nubuck), with a soft nap.
  • Aniline / semi-aniline — describes how much the surface is coated: aniline shows the most natural grain, pigmented hides the most.

How to specify it

In a brief, name the grain, the tannage, the finish, the weight (in mm or oz), and a colour reference (a Pantone or, better, a physical swatch). “Full-grain vegetable-tanned calf, 1.4–1.6mm, semi-aniline, warm cognac” tells a tannery exactly what to pull. “Brown leather” does not.

When in doubt, ask for samples. A two-minute conversation about hides at the briefing stage prevents the most expensive kind of surprise — the one you discover on the first sample.

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