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Maintaining Dr Martens' Greasy Finish

j

(stands for Jerk)
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Some of you will remember my recent thread about Dr Martens boots. I ended up finding a pair of the shoes, made in England, in my size looking almost new at a thrift store for $10, and they are performing their task (work shoes) nicely. They actually look pretty good too.

I have a question for the leather experts, however. These have the 'greasy' finish, which I like. I want to maintain it and protect it, but when I tried regular shoe polish, it made them shiny, which I don't want. Is there something else I can use on these to keep them looking properly greasy?

Thanks.
 

norcaltransplant

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Sno-seal might do the trick. I keep on collecting tongue pads from a Bostonian store in the local mall, so I picked up a bottle of their weather repellent cream. It gives my boots a slightly oily appearance and maybe lasts through one long storm (one week) before requiring a second coat. $5 and worth it for protecting the uppers on your "beaters".
 

j

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Sno seal, excellent idea. I have three or four half-jars of it lying around somewhere. Thanks.
 

JleC

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I swear by stuff called 'Bear Grease', made by House of Laurila. I cant find it anywhere anymore, but liked it better than the Doc's brand. I am hording the last of the tin. Anyone heard of this stuff before?
 

Nektopoli

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Word of caution about the soles or Dr. M, don't wear them in snowy or icy conditions, not because of the precipitation but because of the chemicals use to melt snow and ice, something in there reacts with the sole and cause them to crack. I don't own a pair but have a friend who swears that is why the soles crack.

NP
 

Drew

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If the soles are resistant to oil, fat, acid, alkali, and petrol, as they claim to and have proven to be, I really doubt that salt would cause them to crack.

I've got a couple of pair of Doc Martens I've had for 10 years that definitely show wear and I've taken them to hell and back, but I've never heard, seen, or experienced any such occurrance.
 

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