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*Tanned salmon skin without using glycerine as softener (post-treatment)*, Loes Bogers, 2020
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*Tanned salmon skin with glycerine applied as softener (post-treatment)*, Loes Bogers, 2020
Very strong, translucent tanned fish skin that varies from stiff and a little rigid to flexible/soft and malleable when treated with a softener.
Need attention: every [number][select unit: hours/days] to [free text] describe activity e.g. stir, turn, etc]
* **Fresh uncooked fish skins**, e.g. salmon skins
* the amounts below are enough for 1 large fish skin
* **Denatured alcohol 96%** - 200 ml
* helps to penetrate the skin
* optional: substitute part of the alcohol with a mix of alcohol and a natural alcohol-based ink)
* **Glycerine** - 200 ml
* acts as an oil
* **Dish washing soap (eco)** - 5 ml
1. **Big glass jar**, with tight fitting lid
* to fit all the fish skins
1. **Blunt scraping tool**
* to remove any fish and fat from the skins
1. **Large wooden board**
* to dry and stretch the fish skins on
1. **Hammer and nails**
* to nail the fish skins to the board for drying
- Scrape all the meat, fat and membrane off the fish skins with a blunt scraping tool. Really clean it all off, the skin can take some handling.
- Wash the fish skins thoroughly with cold soapy water (some say to leave it for a day to remove slime)
- Rinse the fish skins with cold tap water
- Put the glycerine and the alcohol in a glass jar
- Sumberge the fish skin in it and shake vigourously for 1 min
- Put a little weight on top if the skin is not submerged (take out before shaking!)
- Keep the fish skins in the jar for 3 days
- Shake the jar vigourously for 1 min every few hours, (or at least once a day)
1. **Drying process**
- After three days, take out the skins (keep the tanning liquid for next time)
- Optional: rinse the fish in cold soapy water, and rub some additional glycerine onto the fish (both sides), for a soft, flexible fish leather.
- Nail the skins to the wooden board. This prevents them from curling and shrinking. Don't make it too tight (it can tear at the nails).
- Leave the board to dry outside, on a balcony or near an open window.
- When completely dry, take them off the board.
Drying the skins with the scales facing down (towards the wood), results in a smoother surface.
- Mold depth: N/A
- Shrinkage thickness 0-5%
- Shrinkage width/length 0-5%
Nailing them to a wooden board stretches them and prevents shrinkage and curling.
*Putting the skins inside a jar, Loes Bogers, 2020*
*Tanning the skins, Loes Bogers, 2020*
*The skins nailed to a board for drying (some plain and some with turmeric alcohol-based ink), Loes Bogers, 2020*
- Add natural *alcohol-based* colorants to dye the fish skins (e.g. turmeric, hibiscus, or grated beetroot/red cabbage: submerge in alcohol and shake every hour for a day).
- Other softeners to try: leather balm, coconut oil, other oils
- Putting a fish skin in the oven for 5-10 minutes at low heat (70 degrees Celcius), it turns highly flexible.
Traditional tanning techniques are centuries old and have been practiced by peoples in most of the Nordic countries (Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway), the Joepik in Alaska, the Nanai in Siberia, the Inuit in Canada and Greenland. It is practiced all around the world (e.g. along the Nile in Kenya, in Mexico and in Australia). Originally, the involved tanning acids from e.g. oak and chestnut bark, urine, or alternatively with egg yolk and vegetable oil and then cold-smoked over fire to make it water-proof (also prevents mold and bacteria growth). Alutiiq artist June Simeonoff Pardue has been credited for this non-traditional tanning process with alcohol and glycerine. Fish skin can also be cleaned and dried without tanning.
### This recipe draws together information from these other recipes
- **Fish Skin Tanning** from the 6-8th grade Heritage Kit Curriculum, by Chugachmiut Heritage Preservation, Anchorage, Alaska USA: [link](https://chugachheritageak.org/pdf/CLO_6-12%20_FISH_SKIN_TANNING_Final.pdf)
- **Biofabricating Materials** by Cecilia Raspanti for Fabricademy 2019-2020: [link](https://class.textile-academy.org/classes/week05A/)
- This technique is strongly associated with indigenous cultures. Using them - especially without crediting it as cultural heritage - is controversial.
- The process is smelly, but the finished product is nearly odorless if done well
- This material is animal-based (but the production & tanning process is significantly eco-friendlier process than those of e.g. cow hide.
- Denatured alcohol is harsh on skin but not dangerous, don’t use on open skin however.
- Choosing fish that are not locally abundant or known to be overfished is considered problematic. Try to find fish from sustainable fishing industries, and fish that is in-season, or the bycatch from local fishing industry.
### Sustainability tags
- Renewable ingredients: yes
- Vegan: no
Fish skins are considered a waste product of the fishing industry and are often trashed as many people tend to favour fish fillets without skin.
The feeling of this tanned and dried fish skin is more like thick paper than leather of cow hide. It has a similar braking surface friction. It is thinner than leather of mammal hide, but equally strong if not stronger. Tanned fish skins that have been treated with glycerine as a softener after tanning, but before drying become softer and flexible.
### Technical and sensory properties
- **Strength**: strong
- **Acoustic properties:** needs further research
- **Anti-bacterial:** needs further research
- **Non-allergenic:** needs further research
- **Electrical properties:** needs further research
- **Heat resistance:** low
- **Water resistance:** waterproof/needs further research on stitching methods
- **Scratch resistance:** high
- **Surface friction:** medium/variable
- Name: Loes Bogers
- Affiliation: Fabricademy student at Waag Textile Lab Amsterdam
- Location: Rotterdam, the Netherlands
- Outside temp: 5-11 degrees Celcius
- Room temp: 18 – 22 degrees Celcius
- PH tap water: 7-8
### Recipe validation
Yes, by Cecilia Raspanti, Textile Lab, Waag Amsterdam, 9 March 2020
1,10 Euros, for a yield of approx. 400 ml tanning liquid that is used once (cost of the liquid is about 3,30 euros but can be used at least 3 times, if not more). Fish skins can be obtained for free as waste from friendly local fish mongers.
## Copyright information
### This recipe is in the public domain (CC0)
Yes, as **Fish Skin Tanning** from the 6-8th grade Heritage Kit Curriculum, by Chugachmiut Heritage Preservation, Anchorage, Alaska USA: [link](https://chugachheritageak.org/pdf/CLO_6-12%20_FISH_SKIN_TANNING_Final.pdf)
- **Fish Skin Tanning** from the 6-8th grade Heritage Kit Curriculum, by Chugachmiut Heritage Preservation, Anchorage, Alaska USA: [link](https://chugachheritageak.org/pdf/CLO_6-12%20_FISH_SKIN_TANNING_Final.pdf)
- **Interview with skin sewer June Pardue** by Anchorage Museum & Smithsonian Arctic Studies Center on Youtube, 16 January 2015: [link](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3GUf8Ao5vNY)
- **Making Leather from Fish Skins** by Eva Hopman, for Hunebed Café, n.d.: [link](https://www.hunebednieuwscafe.nl/2017/10/making-leather-from-fish-skin/)
- **Biofabricating Materials** by Cecilia Raspanti for Fabricademy 2019-2020: [link](https://class.textile-academy.org/classes/week05A/)
### Images of final product
*Tanned salmon skin (no colorant, glycerine softener), Loes Bogers, 2020*
*Tanned salmon skin (no colorant, glycerine softener), Loes Bogers, 2020*
*Tanned salmon skin (no colorant, no softener), Loes Bogers, 2020*
*Tanned salmon skin (dyed with turmeric, no softener), Loes Bogers, 2020*
*Tanned salmon skin (dyed with turmeric, glycerine softener, Loes Bogers, 2020*