Yeah sorry about that, it's just that high of having a new car, my posts will probably go down once I am used to it all, maybe 1 month from now.As others have said to your myriad other posts, read the manual (or search the forum). Lucid recommends against using any products on their leather seats and just cleaning them with a damp cloth.
I had seen a few seats in other owners picture with leather having some cracks wrinkles what is best way to avoid this. What do we need to do ti make sure leather stays perfect ?
You never need to condition it?One of the valued traits of premium leather is that it develops creases and patina with age and use. That is a signal of quality in leather, not of its failure.
And Neurio is absolutely right. Nappa leather will hold up best with no commercial products used for maintenance.
I was about to say the same thing. Good leather is supposed to wear and develop a "lived in" patina. It's a feature, not a bug.One of the valued traits of premium leather is that it develops creases and patina with age and use. That is a signal of quality in leather, not of its failure.
And Neurio is absolutely right. Nappa leather will hold up best with no commercial products used for maintenance.
This is what caught my eye on the lucid. I walked into the studio, seeing a QG/Tahoe and the tahoe looked like vintage aged leather, probably because so many people sat on it. It looked FANTASTIC.I was about to say the same thing. Good leather is supposed to wear and develop a "lived in" patina. It's a feature, not a bug.
You never need to condition it?
Automotive leather is coated in a way that e.g. most shoes are not. So the conditioner would not reach the actual leather itself.You never need to condition it?
That's always been one of my car rules, no matter what car I had or what seats were in it. No eating in the car, and no drinking except from closeable water bottles. It's mostly because I can't even eat at a table without having crumbs spilling all over the place. And the time I had a latte in a cup which spilled. Three day old milk is a very, very bad thing to have in your carpet.My biggest gripe about the leather is that Crumbl cookie crumbs get caught in the perforated leather, and are a bitch to get out. I defy anybody to try and get wet cookie dough out of those little holes…not that I eat in my car or anything!!!
As is a whole tub of wonton soup with shrimp, from your favourite Chinese restaurant, when the lid pops off, and the whole takeaway order dumps all over the fabric backseat. Ask me how I know. For the remaining seven years we owned that particular car, that smell stayed, and stayed. And stayed.That's always been one of my car rules, no matter what car I had or what seats were in it. No eating in the car, and no drinking except from closeable water bottles. It's mostly because I can't even eat at a table without having crumbs spilling all over the place. And the time I had a latte in a cup which spilled. Three day old milk is a very, very bad thing to have in your carpet.
Lucid’s leather is supplied by Bridge of Weir in Scotland, the only carbon neutral auto leather seat supplier. They also do leather for Aston Martin and McLaren. I believe due to their unique leather process a damp cloth is all that is needed. I missed this part of the manual initially, and used chemical guys liquid leather conditioner on part of the dash. It actually created a subtle discoloration in the dashboard visible at a certain light angle (I have Tahoe interior), since then I just use a damp cloth if I need to clean it, seems to work well.You never need to condition it?
Can blue Jean marks transfer?Just use a damp cloth. While @TotalDetailingPA’s advice is generally good for other vehicles, for the Lucid please just use a damp cloth.
Also for the denim-esque fabric especially.
Just use a damp cloth. While @TotalDetailingPA’s advice is generally good for other vehicles, for the Lucid please just use a damp cloth.
Also for the denim-esque fabric especially.
..HONDA uses a premium leather? In previous odysseys, ive found the leather to be "vinyl feeling," and surprisingly found chevy and fords to be better.A few years back I asked a detailer to clean and condition the leather in our Honda Odyssey. He said that, while GM and Ford leathers might warrant such treatment, Honda used a premium leather that did not.
I drove a 2011 Honda Odyssey for six years and have had our current Odyssey for almost six. I took the first car to a construction site every day for the two years our home was under construction, and I used both vehicles for almost daily dog rides with the windows open (i. e., with high UV exposure in south Florida). I never did anything to the leather other than wiping with a water-damped cloth, and neither car developed any signs of leather deterioration.
I see no reason whatsoever to ignore Lucid's advice to clean their leathers with only a damp cloth.
You're coming from a Tesla, right? That was a known issue with Tesla's faux leather, which is essentially plastic. In fairness, I wear jeans a lot, and I never had that issue with my Tesla. My interior held up really well over the time I had that car.Can blue Jean marks transfer?