Caring For Your Boots
By Chris Townsend.
When wet footwear has dried, it needs to be treated to restore suppleness and water repellency.
Wax does not provide long-term waterproofing. There is a ratio between the amount of wax you apply, the degree of waterproofness obtained, and the breathability of your boots. Several layers of wax will mean better and longer-lasting water resistance, but also less breathability. If you wear leather boots in warm weather (which I don't recommend), I'd go easy on the wax or your feet will get wetter from sweat than from the occasional summer shower. In cold, wet conditions, especially in snow, heavily waxed boots are necessary. Freshly waxed boots can still get wet after just a few hours in dew-wet grass or melting snow, but they will dry out more quickly and absorb less moisture than ones that haven't been treated. I also apply a wet-seal to seams and exposed stitching; it protects seams and prevents them from leaking for a while.
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