This section is from the "A Complete Dictionary of Dry Goods" book, by George S. Cole. Also available from Amazon: A complete dictionary of dry goods and history of silk, cotton, linen, wool and other fibrous substances,: Including a full explanation of the modern processes ... together with various useful tables.
Buckskin. A soft kind of glove leather, yellowish or blue-gray in color, made originally by tanning deer-skins with oil and wood-smoke, but now sometimes being prepared from sheepskins. At present, in its preparation a great deal of manipulation is required, the softness of which is its chief characteristic, being produced by the use of either oil or brains in dressing it. [See Leather]
 
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