Lobby chesterfields & wing chairs
Re-tan and re-colour the welt-line and arm fronts that absorb guest contact. Restores the cushion roll without altering the established patina.
Brief the atelierHotel leather restoration for the pieces a five-star property cannot afford to lose - lobby chesterfields, banquette wings, club armchairs, suite recliners, library leather, ballroom seating - restored between the last cover and the morning turndown.
Hospitality leather does not fail with age. It fails with volume.
Eight thousand seatings a year on a single banquette. Forty wedding nights on a ballroom wing. The first cracks appear at the back-of-armrest fold, then the seat-pan apex, then the welt. Most properties replace. We restore - on-site, overnight.
The programme has been written for the operational realities of a luxury floor: documented walks before quotation, after-hours work windows, scent-neutralised finishes, careful handling of fixed seating. The atelier draws on years of caring for B&B Italia and Maxalto modular leather, Fendi Casa conservation, and Poltrona Frau patina work.
Pricing per asset class, never per hour. A documented property walk precedes every quotation.
Re-tan and re-colour the welt-line and arm fronts that absorb guest contact. Restores the cushion roll without altering the established patina.
Brief the atelierEvery leather piece on the floor is photographed, condition-graded against a six-band scale, and entered into a property dossier. Nothing is quoted until the walk is complete.
Dye, finish and grain are matched against an atelier library built over years of caring for European luxury seating. Most matches are mixed by hand on the property the night before work begins.
Work begins after the last F&B service and ends before the first key-card swipe. Dust drapes, fume containment and scent neutralisation are protocol, not extras.

Last F&B cover clears. Our case enters by service door. Drapes positioned before any solvent is unsealed.

Every piece read against a six-band scale. Dossier annotated on the floor. Tonight's work-list locked.

The first contact surface - the welt - is opened up. Skin oils, hair products, food traces lifted with pH-neutral solvent.

Re-colour mixed by hand, confirmed against an unworked panel under the property's own lamps. No two passes are the same hue.

Final finish applied. Forced-air pass neutralises any residual scent. Drapes begin lifting from the perimeter inward.

Drapes off. The only sign of the night is the absence of damage.
A heritage chesterfield wing, fourteen years in service: re-coloured, re-conditioned and re-finished across two consecutive nights without removing a single piece from the room. The drawing room reopened at 7 a.m. on day three with the same banker's tan it left the workshop wearing in 2011.
The matching dossier alone took six pages - this is the kind of work documented in detail in our luxury furniture care chronicle and benchmarked against the professional Delhi restoration log.
They were the only restorers who agreed
to work between checkouts.
The banquettes were unusable Friday morning.
By Sunday brunch the only sign of work
was the absence of damage.
Tyson walked our property
for four hours
before sending a quote.
We have since put his dossier into the GM onboarding pack.
The atelier's restraint matters
as much as their work.
They never recommend re-upholstery
when conditioning will do.
That is rare in this category.
Adjacent carpet, joinery and art are draped and sealed before any solvent leaves a bottle. The work surface is the only surface we touch.
Low-VOC finishes paired with a forced-air pass at the end of the shift. The lobby smells like the lobby by service time.
Staff carry photo ID, property clearance forms and signed materials manifests. In-suite work carries a separate confidentiality undertaking.
One artisan signs the dossier, runs the shift and answers the desk - Tyson. No floating crews, no rotating supervisors.
Twenty-two years restoring leather; eleven of them serving hospitality clients across India's luxury hotel circuit. Every property job is graded, finished and signed by him - no other byline appears on the dossier.
The atelier publishes its protocols openly. Hospitality leads are welcome to read how we approach the specific finishes their inventory was built from before they invite us in.
The work is performed inside the property, around its operating calendar. Leather is not detached from its frame, not crated to a workshop, not removed from the floor. Soft brush extraction, hand-mixed pigment match, low-VOC topcoat - applied in situ behind dust drape and fume containment.
Yes. The protocol is written to fit inside the service corridor that already exists - the gap between the last F&B cover and the first key-card swipe. Dust drapes, fume containment and scent-neutral finishes are standard, not extras.
Lobby chesterfields and wing chairs, banquette and F&B seating, suite recliners, ballroom and event-wing leather, library and reading-room seating, concierge and bell-desk inlays, spa wing daybeds.
Delhi NCR is the home circuit (Lutyens, Aerocity, Chanakyapuri, Cyber City, Golf Course Road). City dossiers are also published for Mumbai, Delhi, Gurugram and Bengaluru. Audience: five-star hotels, resorts, members-only clubs, embassy residences, restaurants.
Per asset, never per hour. A documented property walk - per-piece photography, condition grading and finish identification - precedes every quotation. The dossier becomes the basis of the quote.
Tyson, Lead Artisan, signs every property dossier personally. There is no floating crew rota - the same byline appears on the walk, the dossier, the work night and the follow-up.
Hospitality inquiries are read by Tyson directly. The reply proposes a window for the property walk and an outline of how the dossier will be put together.