Flossy Salt

FLOSSY SALT

Leather is developed using animal skin and hides. These skins and hides are chemically treated to preserve quality and texture. This process is known as tanning. After going through this process, the leather becomes strong, flexible and is able to resist decay. Different animal skins and hides are used to make leather which includes horses, cattle, goats, cows, calves, lambs, deer, kangaroos, reptiles, seals and walruses.
Each animal’s skin has different characteristics and so the tanning process for each animal’s skin is different. The process also changes with the requirements of the customers of the end product. After the hide or the skin is stripped from the animals, it is salted and dried. This process is called “curing”. There are two ways to cure: wet-salting and brine-curing. Out of the two wet-salting is more common, since it’s faster and easier.

MORE GUIDE ABOUT FLOSSY SALT

During the process of brine-curing, the skins or hides are positioned carefully in vats where they are smothered with a mixture of disinfectant and salt. Flossy salt, also known as hide salt, has some chemicals added in it which act as pesticides on the skins and hides.

HubSalt does not enjoy a good market for Flossy salt since hides and skins can also be salted with low-quality salt. There are some quality conscious customers in the market as well who purchase Flossy salt from HubSalt to retain the quality of the leather being tanned. Bacterial growth in the skins and hides can be injurious to the workers at tanning factories, so 1% of Boric Acid and Sodium Fluoride is used as a precaution to prevent bacterial growth. The salt used in the industry of Flossy Salt isn’t that harmful but the chemicals added can have an adverse effect on the quality of the leather.

Typical, Sieve Analysis or Mesh Size Distribution (MSD) used in this grade is between 2 mm and 0.5mm