Full leather trim

From www.leather-dictionary.com - The Leather Dictionary
Revision as of 18:11, 19 February 2017 by Admin (Talk | contribs)

Jump to: navigation, search

LEATHER-DICTIONARY.jpg


Ferrari-F142-04.jpg Ferrari-F142-06.jpg


Full leather trim - Leather appointed - Leather trim

Car manufacturers sometimes sell the interior of a vehicle as a "full leather interior" or "leather appointed" or "leather trim" with corresponding surcharge. In such cases it is assumed, that the entire interior with a grained smooth surface is covered with genuine leather and no artificial leather or plastic parts are processed.

In some countries, the terms "leather trim", "full leather trim" and "partial leather trim" are defined.

According to this, 80% of the expected surfaces of a "leather trim" should be covered with genuine leather.

For a "full leather trim", all surfaces are expected to be real leather. These include the seats (except the back side of the seats), the dashboard, the panels, the centre console and also the steering wheel (outer rim only) and the gear knob.

Partial leather trim

The seats in vehicles are not always completely made of leather. Sometimes only the contact surfaces are made of genuine leather, but the side panels, the backs of the backrests and headrests or the armrests are made of imitation leather. Such seats do not have a "leather trim". The only exceptions are the backs of the seats to be a "leather trim".

Partial leather trims are car seats, where some contact areas are made of leather, and the rest is Alcantara, artificial leather or fabric. However, it is only "partial leather" if atleast the middle panels or the outer flanks are made of genuine leather.

Split leather in cars

The vehicle manufacturers also increasingly use coated or embossed split leather for the unloaded areas (door linings, headrests), but also for steering wheels and the shift knobs without corresponding declaration. The buyer acquires in good faith a high-quality "leather interior" or "full leather trim" and receives low quality split leather on areas outside the contact area. Since these are |coated and embossed, even specialists cannot recognize whether it is a more valuable grain leather or a cheaper split leather. Therefore, the purchaser should consciously ask and let assure in the purchase contract that no split leather is bought.

In the case of leather furniture, the regulation can be different from country to country. In Germany, it is regulated that split leather should not be used in the contact area, but it must nevertheless be pointed out clearly that it has been used. In this case, the consumer is informed of what he has purchased. Strange, that this only for furniture. One must assume that the strong lobby of the car industry in Germany has prevented this regulation for vehicle leather and sells cars all around the world where the consumer is not adequately informed about the value of the used materials.


Vollleder-02.jpg Vollleder-01.jpg

BMW E28 M5 of 1986 with full leather trim. Even the area under the roof is made of nubuck, which is not expected even with a full leather trim.

 

Teillederausstattung-01.jpg Opel-Omega-A-3000-1988.jpg

Classic partial leather interior. - partial leather interior the Opel Omega.

 

BMW-Z1-fungelb-01.jpg

BMW Z1 "fun yellow" with partial leather interior.

 

Lancia-Alcantara-Leder-01-2.jpg BMW-X3-Pearlpoint-Pearl.jpg

Lancia with Alcantara-leather-combination. - BMW X3 with partial leather interior.

 

Mercedes1978.jpg VW-Golf-Aigner.jpg

No partial leather interior: Mercedes Fabric-artificial leather-combination and Volkswagen Golf "Aigner" (not enough leather to call it "partial leather interior").

 

BMW-Flechtung-E30-1991.jpg

BMW partial leather interior. Black leather outside, inside fabric woven with leather strips.

 



Additional information


Colourlock-GB-03.jpg

WE UNDERSTAND LEATHER - WWW.COLOURLOCK.COM