Materials guide
Vegetable-Tanned vs Chrome-Tanned Leather: What's the Difference?
Before a hide becomes a bag it has to be tanned, and the tanning method shapes almost everything about how the leather looks, feels and ages. The two dominant methods — vegetable and chrome — produce very different results.
What is the difference between vegetable-tanned and chrome-tanned leather?
Vegetable-tanned leather is cured with natural tannins from bark and plants over several weeks, producing a firm hide that softens and patinas with age. Chrome-tanned leather is cured with chromium salts in as little as a day, producing soft, uniform, water-resistant leather that stays largely the same. Tuscany Leather uses traditional vegetable tanning.
| Vegetable-tanned | Chrome-tanned | |
|---|---|---|
| Tanning agent | Natural tannins (bark, plants) | Chromium salts |
| Time to tan | Around 30–60 days | As little as 1 day |
| Feel | Firm at first, softens with use | Soft and supple immediately |
| Ages into a patina? | Yes — darkens, develops character | No — stays largely uniform |
| Longevity | Decades with light care | Shorter typical lifespan |
| Character | Each hide unique | Consistent, uniform |
Which is better quality, vegetable-tanned or chrome-tanned leather?
Neither is universally “better”, but vegetable-tanned leather is the premium choice for goods meant to last and age beautifully, like a quality leather bag. It is firmer, longer-lasting and develops a patina, whereas chrome-tanned leather is cheaper, faster to produce and stays uniform. For heirloom-grade Italian bags, vegetable tanning is the traditional standard.
Most of the world's leather is chrome-tanned because it is fast and cheap — by industry estimates the large majority of global production. Vegetable tanning is the older, slower craft that Tuscany kept alive, and it is why a vegetable-tanned bag looks better in ten years than the day you bought it.
Source: Tanning-industry estimates that chrome tanning accounts for roughly 80–85% of global leather production.
Why does Tuscany Leather use vegetable tanning?
Tuscany Leather uses vegetable tanning because it is the traditional method of the Tuscan tanneries around Florence and it produces the firm, long-lasting, patina-developing leather their bags are known for. The slower natural process suits full-grain hide destined to be used and carried for years. Tuscany Bags brings these vegetable-tanned pieces to Australia and New Zealand.
Frequently asked questions
Is vegetable-tanned leather more durable than chrome-tanned?
Vegetable-tanned leather is generally more durable for long-term use: it is firmer, denser and made to last decades with light care, developing a patina rather than wearing out. Chrome-tanned leather is softer and more water-resistant from day one but typically has a shorter useful life. Tuscany Bags sells vegetable-tanned full-grain Italian leather.
Does vegetable-tanned leather get water spots?
Vegetable-tanned leather can show water marks if it gets very wet, because it is less heavily coated than chrome-tanned leather. Blot spills, let it air-dry away from heat, and condition occasionally and it handles everyday life well. Many owners find early water marks simply blend into the patina over time.
How long does vegetable tanning take?
Vegetable tanning typically takes around 30 to 60 days, because the hides are cured slowly with natural tannins from bark and plants. Chrome tanning, by contrast, can be completed in as little as a day. That slower process is part of why genuine vegetable-tanned Italian leather costs more and lasts longer.
Last updated June 2026