Introduction: How to Make High Grade Natural Beeswax Leather Polish and Conditioner
Years ago, when I started working with leather I would often use the commercially available polishes on the store shelves, or the proprietary blends found at the leather craft stores. They ended up being pretty costly, but more so, they didn't last very long and contained chemicals that seemed counter intuitive to traditional craft. So I set out to create my own.
My first attempt was simply a mix of paraffin wax, harvested from candles and heavy grade mineral oil. It worked, but again, I was still using chems on my work. So the formula evolved from there. As usual, I had to research. A trip to the library proved very informative. I started by looking at recipes that were nearly 1000 years old, and although they didn't really mention ratios, they did talk about ingredients in detail. (interestingly, human urine featured heavily in most). So, I eventually made a trip to a local bee keeper and picked up some natural beeswax and started experimenting with that.
I wanted my polish to do five things:
1 - It had to soften the leather; Dying can end up removing the natural oils in the leather so I needed a way to put them back.
2 - It had to Condition; Leather should have a supple feel when you handle it and though it may not be stiff, it shouldn't end up feeling course either.
3 - It had to protect; I mean long term protection that kept the oils inside, preventing the leather from drying and cracking, and also keep outside elements like salt and dirt from saturating.
4 - It had to shine and bring out the natural luster of the leather.
5 - It has to degrease; old leather can be pretty dirty.
Now, I have my own proprietary formula that I sell, and I'm not about to give that one up, however I wanted to offer some insight into mixing your own, personalized blend of ingredients for a polish that will enhance your work.
Here's a caveat; This polish works on A LOT of different materials, and not just leather. I use it on wood, pleather, canvas (for oiled canvas) even metals, but does not play well with suede. If you're not sure if it will work, I recommend trying a tiny bit on a hidden area before using it on the whole piece.
In the first image, you can see a before and after using the polish. I generally use pieces of old cotton hoodies for buffing rags, and tho they may leave a bit of lint behind, they polish extremely well. Another interesting factoid; in a different form, this polish can be used as lip balm. It's all about switching up the ratios which I'll talk about later.
Step 1: Tools and Supplies
Tools:
Measuring spoons
Tins for your polish (I'm not a fan of plastic bottles but you can use them)
Pyrex measuring cup
Small pot
Small aluminum pie plate
Wooden spoon
Bamboo skewers (optional)
Supplies;
Beeswax - solid; Protection for leather. Creates a barrier for environmental influences
Coconut butter - semi solid; Conditions the leather surface.
Sweet Almond oil - liquid; Softens the leather internally and replaces the natural oils lost through dying
Castor oil - liquid; Heavier oil that provides the 'shine'. Can be replaced with mineral oil if necessary.
**Optional**
Pure Ammonia or Alcohol - liquid; Cleans and degreases the surface before polishing. As I mentioned before, the old recipes called for human urine.
Step 2: Prepping Your Equipment
The setup is extremely simple. The small pie tin is flattened, and holes are punched in it to allow bubbles to pass through. It's a very important step because allowing the pyrex cup to sit on the bottom of the pot could cause the preparation to burn. Next fill the pot so that the water just covers the pie tin by 1/4 of an inch. Finally the Pyrex cup is sat on top of the pie tin.
Step 3: Adding Ingredients
Ratios;
Ingredients are broken down into three categories; solid, semi-solid and liquid and the ratio of each depends on the consistency of polish you are trying to create. A safe mixture ratio would be 2-1/2-1/2 liquid to solid and semi-solid respectively, however you can change it up depending on your application. If you wanted a softer polish, you can increase 3-1/2-1/2 or even as much as 4-1/2-1/2, however I wouldn't go much softer than that. If you reduced to 1-1/2-1/2 you would be making something the consistency of lip balm. More beeswax/butter means firmer mixture while more oil means softer. The choice is yours.
Ammonia/Alcohol;
When using your polish on older items, grease and dirt can embed themselves in your project. That means cleaning before you apply, however, it's difficult to get everything out. For this, we add a grease cutter to the mix to ensure that the polish soaks in evenly allowing for max protection. It doesn't take much to do the job. In fact, only a few drops will do the trick as it really doesn't blend well with the mixture. I've tried it with more and found there is no benefit so 4-5 drops per cup should be enough.
Caveat; if you intend on making lip balm, leave out the ammonia.
First Step;
Add the beeswax and coconut butter. If you need a measurement to start with you can use 1/8 cup of beeswax and 1/8 cup of coconut butter. Allow them to melt completely and add your ammonia, if you choose to include it.
Next;
Keep stirring then slowly add your almond oil (1/4 cup). It will cool the mix causing lumps so add it slowly allowing the mixture to re-melt. When it's fully blended, you can start adding the castor oil (1/4 cup). It's quite a bit thicker, so you'll need to stir it good to blend it in.
Keep heating the mixture for 4-5 minutes making sure that it never boils. If you see steam rising from your mixture, reduce the heat and keep mixing. Don't worry about water steam covering the outside of the pyrex cup. It shouldn't interfere with your concoction. You can wipe it off and keep going.
Step 4: Pouring Your Mixture
Get your tins ready by removing the lids and lining them up. You can pour your mixture directly into them from your pyrex cup, filling them to 1/8" below the lip. If you can't find small tins, old altoid, mint, candy tins will do just fine, or you can purchase small plastic cups with lids from the dollar store.
Step 5: Let It Cool
That's it. All that's left is to let the mixture cool down. The ammonia will leave small bubbles in the mixture and won't mix completely, but that's alright. They'll stay suspended inside as sort of, 'micro beads' that will degrease your items as it conditions and protects.
As I mentioned before, this preparation will work on a huge variety of materials, is very long lasting, and is the basis for things like lip balm, oiled canvas, waxed leather etc. All you need to do is change up the ratios of ingredients. Experiment with them and never spend a cent on commercial chemicals that are designed to wear off quickly, forcing you to re-apply often and spend more money.
Thank you for following me and I hope you enjoyed the instructable.

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139 Comments
Question 1 year ago on Step 5
Am working on production of shoe polish from beeswax as my final year project. Going through your work was very helpful, my question now is cant i use only beeswax ?? Must coconut butter be included
Question 1 year ago on Step 5
What about adding color?
Question 2 years ago on Step 5
I really enjoyed the way you explained your process. I got into making an organic leather balm by accident (committing to making it for a company - run by friends - making superior handmade leather shoes, after 2 glasses of wine, and my sister being into honey and honey related products, like bees wax). And once I got started I was hooked. But I am facing challenges...mostly in regards to increasing production, as the mixture solidifies very quickly. Also in South Africa we can't buy coconut butter (except via Ghana, etc at a HUGE cost) so I buy organic coconut flakes (from Mozambique), clean them from their little brown skins (Zen exercise), and process them into butter with my 32 year old Phillips food processor (also an interesting process). But very time consuming. I am now also looking at replacing the glass jar in the pot with a stainless steel jar (or anything else that will keep things hotter a little longer). I am experimenting as I go along (learning a lot) - but I would really appreciate any input from your side. For now I am filling 100ml, 50ml and 15ml screw top tins. They are BEAUTIFUL, and the people who understand the process and want to keep to the organic and natural side of things really LOVE the balm. (It was a Goldilocks story: first recipe was too soft, second recipe was too hard, third recipe was JUST right!) For now I need to up the production - it is very labour intensive. Also I was asked about 1 liter tins for leather furniture. I am however unsure about the way the mix will solidify at such a "depth" (deeper tin). The tins I am using are shallow, so the process is much quicker. But I am not clued up enough about what would happen if eg the tin is deeper/bigger. (eg with the coconut butter it becomes liquid - to use it easily it has solidify in a shallow pan with wax paper. At first I poured it into a glass jar...big mistake when you need to get it into the mix...) Also when I kept it going in the processor for a period of 10 minutes (looking for a short cut), instead of bursts of about 4 minutes each, it became coconut paste (I am still looking for a recipe for coconut cookies...:)), so there are definite ways of doing things. I would appreciate any input from you. Kind regards Vanessa
Answer 2 years ago
Can you get shea butter? It has a higher melting point than the coconut oil, but I think it can serve the same use. You may need to adjust some of the other ingredients so it isn't as stiff. When you pour into deeper tins, you want to do it in layers - maybe about the same depth as your shallow tins and let it solidify before you add the next layer. If you can get an empty paint tin (in the US they have them at hardware and paint stores), a lot of people use those for big batch production. When you get to that scale, you may want to work outside.
Reply 2 years ago
Thank you!!
Answer 2 years ago
I used plain coconut oil in the tub that you get in any supermarket.
Worked like a dream.
Reply 2 years ago
Thank you! I will try it!
Much appreciated
Vanessa
2 years ago
I don't understand your ratios, you say 2-1/2-1/2 solid semi-solid and liquid is good. So 4:1:1? And 6:1:1 and 8:1:1 would be softer? So more solid makes it softer?
2 years ago on Step 1
Hi there,
Checking out the recipe for the conditioner I noticed you said castor oil can be replaced with mineral oil. In my experience, using anything petroleum based or containing mineral oil can cause excessively rapid drying of the leather and damage the material over time. I would suggest avoiding mineral oil if possible, (I wonder if vegetable glycerine could be a viable substitute?) Otherwise the recipe looks great and I found it very helpful, thanks for sharing!!
3 years ago
Hi, are you still selling your proprietary blend and can it be purchased online?
Question 3 years ago on Step 5
Hi, I have 2 questions
1. can cocoa butter or shea butter substitute Coconut butter?
2. can Olive oil or other kind of oils substitute Sweet almond oil?
Thank you
Question 4 years ago
I like the sound of this recipe for leather. I just recently bought some pure neatsfoot oil to oil some leather grips, bags etc that I'm making for our motorcycle. I then read about some recipes that uses a mix of neatsfoot oil and beeswax to finish leather. Have you used neatsfoot oil in this recipe before and if so what are your thoughts about using it?
Thank you....
Reply 4 years ago
No I haven't. I've replaced the coconut with shea butter tho. It's a pretty good upgrade to the recipe.
5 years ago
Can coconut oil and extra wax subsitite for the coconut butter? Because I'm allergic to coconut meat, which is in the butter( Just to be safe). Also, do you know of a substitute for the almond oil?
Reply 4 years ago
I made this with coconut oil in stead of coconut butter and used olive oil in stead of almond oil. Worked perfectly. I added a tiny bit more beeswax, because I like it to be more stiff and balm-like. I did 1/8 cup (plus maybe an extra tablespoon) of beeswax, 1/8 cup coconut oil, 1/4 cup olive oil, 1/4 cup castor oil.... I made it a previous time without castor oil (castor was replaced with more olive) and I think I maybe like that more. The castor makes it a bit more sticky to work with and the result is more shiny. I prefer the leather a bit more matte.
Reply 4 years ago
I would also like to know if coconut oil can be substituted for coconut butter with extra beeswax as I am not able to find the coconut butter localy.
4 years ago
Antagonizer, you mentioned you make your own proprietary formula. How can I purchase some to rejuvenate my leather sofa? marcareich@gmail.com.
Thanks,
Marc
Question 4 years ago
@antagonizer Hiya, I'm looking to sub-out castor oil for coconut oil as the shiny effect of castor oil is a little more on the intense side of the effect I'm after - in this case, would you consider coconut oil a semi-solid or liquid?? I was thinking semi-solid because it is soft at room temperature but it's still considered an oil? Would love to hear your thoughts. Thanks for the awesome tutorial :)
- Iris
Reply 4 years ago
It should work just fine. Castor oil is very thick, much like the coconut oil at room temp, so a 1to1 replacement of ingredients would be good. You can also use shea butter in the mix, tho you'd have to add oil to compensate for the density of it. It's a great conditioner, just make sure it's well melted otherwise it'll be gritty in the mix.
Reply 4 years ago
Thanks so much for getting back to me, just have my first prototype batch cooling now. This will make a lovely Christmas present for almost anyone. Cheers!