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My Father's Apron Got Better Every Year for 40 Years. I Spent 3 Years Tracing It Back to a Single Oak-Bark Tannery Hidden in Curwensville, Pennsylvania, Operating Since 1867 (Population 2,700)

Found & Made reports on why a Pennsylvania leather craftsman who spent three years chasing a 157-year-old tannery in a town most Americans have never heard of is shipping his final 200 aprons direct this summer.

By Albert Grace, Staff Writer at Found & Made, June 7, 2026

Joe Mercer's father wore a leather apron at his forge every single day for 40 years.

 

Not occasionally. Not on the hard jobs. Every day, from the time he fired up the forge in the morning to the time he hung it on the hook at night. Earl Mercer wore it through two recessions, one flood that nearly took the building, and more hours of open flame and flying iron than anyone could count.

 

When Earl retired in 2002, the apron was in better shape than his knees.

 

That line is the thing Joe could not explain for a long time. He had owned leather goods his whole life: belts, wallets, and work gloves. They all did the same thing: looked good for a year or two, then dried out, cracked along the fold lines, and eventually peeled. He thought that was just what leather did.

 

Earl's apron never did any of that. It got darker where he worked hardest. It shaped itself to the way he stood at the anvil. It absorbed 40 years of heat and oil and sweat and came out looking like something that had been made for him specifically: not something he had bought off a shelf in 1965.

 

Joe Mercer is 63, a leather craftsman from Clearfield County, Pennsylvania. For the past eleven years, he has been making aprons from the same oak-bark-tanned leather that kept his father's apron alive through nearly four decades at the forge. This summer, 200 of those aprons are leaving his workshop at $69 each, shipped direct to American homes.

 

Most premium retailers sell leather aprons for $149 to $199. Williams-Sonoma lists theirs at $179. Joe set his price when he finally understood what his father's apron was made of—and why his own aprons needed to be made the same way.

What Joe Found in the Attic in 2012

Earl Mercer passed away in November 2012, at 74. Joe cleaned out the farmhouse the following spring.

 

The apron was on a hook in the attic, exactly where Earl had put it the last day he walked out of the forge. It had been hanging there for ten years. Joe took it down and held it. He pressed his thumb into the leather and watched something happen that he had never seen before: the surface lightened under his thumb, then went dark again when he let go.

 

He brought it to Dale Oakes, a leather restorer over in Curwensville who had been working on leather goods since 1979. Dale looked at it for a few minutes without saying much. He felt the edge. He smelled the underside. He did the same thumb press Joe had done.

 

Then he looked up and said three words: "Oak bark tanned."

 

He explained it for about 20 minutes. By the end of it, Joe understood why his father's apron had survived 40 years at the forge. He also understood that almost nobody makes leather this way anymore and that most people have no idea what they are missing. Dale knew what the leather was. He didn't know if anyone was still making it.

The Thing Nobody Tells You About Leather

Almost every leather product sold in America today was tanned in a rotating chemical drum for 24 to 48 hours.

 

That process is called chrome tanning. It was introduced in the 1880s as an industrial shortcut. It is fast, it is cheap, and it produces leather that is soft and uniform right away. It also produces leather that will start to crack and peel somewhere between three and seven years of regular use. The chrome salts that were forced into the fibers under pressure begin to break down. The fibers that were never fully bonded to each other start to separate. You see it first at the fold lines, then at the edges, and eventually the surface starts to flake off.

 

If you have ever owned a leather belt, a leather jacket, or a leather apron that started peeling after a few years, that is why.

 

Before chrome tanning existed, the only way to tan leather was with plant-based tannins: most commonly the bark of oak trees. You take ground oak bark, mix it with water in large stone pits, and submerge the hides. Over 12 to 18 months, the tannins work their way into every fiber of the hide and bind permanently to the collagen. Not coated. Bound. The leather becomes something fundamentally different from what you started with.

 

Oak-bark vegetable-tanned leather does not peel. It does not crack under normal use. It develops a patina that is a direct record of how it has been used and by whom. It gets better as it ages.

 

Earl's apron was made this way. Once Joe understood that, he had one question: who still does this?

3 Years and a Town of 2,700 People

Joe spent three years trying to answer that question.

 

Most of the old American tanneries are gone. The industry switched to chrome tanning in the early 1900s and never looked back. He contacted 14 different leather suppliers before he found what he was looking for. It turned out to be less than 40 miles from his own workshop.

 

Curwensville, Pennsylvania. Population 2,700. A tannery that has been running oak-bark pits since 1867, through two world wars, the collapse of the American shoe industry, and every economic shift that wiped out the competition. The stone pits are the originals. The process has not changed in 157 years because nothing has been invented that does the job better.

 

The leather Joe sources from them spends 14 months in those pits before it arrives at his workshop. It comes in dark and heavy, with a faint smell of oak and earth that settles into something warmer within the first few weeks of handling. It is about four millimeters thick—roughly twice the weight of most commercial leather aprons. It is stiff when new. It needs to be broken in, the same way a good pair of work boots does. Within two to three months of regular use, it starts to move with the body.

 

People sometimes write to Joe in the first few weeks asking if something is wrong with the leather. 

 

Nothing is wrong. 

 

Chrome-tanned leather is soft immediately because the chrome process shortens the fiber bonding. Oak-bark leather is stiff at first because the fibers are fully bound and the leather is still adjusting to its owner. It is not finished yet. 

 

The person wearing it is the last step.

How Joe Makes Every Apron

Every hide that comes from those Curwensville pits gets cut by hand in Joe's workshop in Clearfield County. 

 

He uses patterns he developed over seven years, adjusted for how this specific leather stretches and where the stress points fall over time. The brass rivets are set one at a time with a hand press, not a pneumatic tool. He can feel when a rivet is properly seated. 

 

That feedback disappears through a machine.

 

His part-time assistant handles the finishing and the straps. The adjustable shoulder straps are full-grain leather from the same Curwensville tannery, cut slightly thinner for flexibility. Each apron takes about three hours from the first cut to the final inspection.

 

Joe makes them in batches of 20. The current batch of 200 has been in production since March. 

 

When they are gone, the next batch of hides will not be ready until early 2027. 

 

They went into the Curwensville pits in January 2026 and need another eight months.

Why Joe Is Not Selling Through Stores

In April 2026, a national outdoor and grilling retailer reached out after seeing Joe's aprons in a Pennsylvania crafts newsletter. They offered to carry 200 of them across 18 stores at a retail price of $219. Joe's cut would have been $43 per apron.

 

The first thing they asked was whether he could use a different leather supplier to bring the cost down.

 

He said no to the whole deal before the call was over.

 

"If I change the leather, I am not selling the same apron," Joe says. "I am selling something that will peel in five years with my name on it. My father's apron is in a glass case on my workshop wall. Forty years from now I want someone to pull one of mine out of an attic in perfect condition and wonder the same thing I wondered."

 

His price: $69 direct from Clearfield County, Pennsylvania. The lowest he can go while covering the leather cost, the brass hardware, his assistant's time, and his own.

 

The price gap between $69 and $179 at a retail store is not quality. It is the difference between 14 months and 24 hours.

What People Said After One Summer

When Joe announced the direct summer release in April 2026, the orders came in fast. A few months in, the letters started coming back.

 

"I am a woodworker. I have owned four leather aprons in 15 years and every single one peeled within four years. I bought Joe's in February. It is June now. The leather has already started changing where my hands rest. Not cracking, not peeling. Changing. Darkening where I work hardest. I checked this morning and there is not a single crack anywhere on the surface. I do not think there ever will be." 

— Thomas Ward, Burlington, Vermont

 

"My husband grills every weekend from May through October and goes through a canvas apron every two years because the grease and heat destroy them. I gave him this apron for his birthday in March. By the end of May he called me into the kitchen to look at it. You could already see where the heat of the grill had darkened the lower panel and where he wipes his hands on the right side. He said: 'This thing is turning into me.' That is exactly what it is doing." 

— Patricia Osei, Nashville, Tennessee

 

"I have worked in professional kitchens for 22 years and I have never owned an apron I did not want to replace. I started wearing Joe's at home on weekends last fall. By winter it already fit differently than day one. My kitchen partner saw it last week and ordered one the same afternoon. I did not say a single word. He just picked it up and held it." 

— Marcus Green, San Francisco, California

 

In May 2026, a Pennsylvania heritage crafts organization offered Joe a featured spot at their annual summer exhibition in Philadelphia.

 

He declined. "I have aprons to finish and ship," he said. "Philadelphia can wait."

 

5 Reasons This Is the Last Apron You Will Ever Buy

The leather was tanned for 14 months in oak-bark pits, not 24 hours in a chemical drum. Oak-bark vegetable tanning is the oldest leather process in the world. The tannins bind permanently to every fiber in the hide. The leather does not peel. It does not crack under normal use. It develops a patina that is the direct record of how it has been used and by whom. It comes from a tannery in Curwensville, Pennsylvania that has been running the same pits since 1867.

 

It records use and becomes yours specifically. Press your thumb into this leather and the surface lightens. Let go and it darkens back. Over months and years of use, the leather permanently marks where you work hardest: where your hands rest, where the heat reaches, where the straps pull. After one summer your apron will look nothing like anyone else's. After five years it will be unmistakably and irreplaceably yours.

 

Brass rivets set by hand, one at a time. Every rivet is seated with a hand press so Joe can feel when it is properly set. This matters at the stress points (the shoulder strap attachments and the pocket edges) where a poorly set rivet works loose within a season. None of Joe's rivets have come back loose in eleven years of making these aprons.

 

Four millimeters thick—roughly twice the weight of commercial leather aprons. Thick enough to stop a splatter, thick enough to buffer heat, thick enough to last decades. Most commercial leather aprons use two-millimeter chrome-tanned hides that feel soft immediately and start failing at the flex points within a few years. This apron is stiff when new. It breaks in to the wearer's body within two to three months.

 

Made entirely in Clearfield County, Pennsylvania, by two people. Every hide cut by hand. Every rivet set by hand. No factory, no outsourced components, no imported hardware. The brass is American. The leather comes from a tannery 40 miles from the workshop. The whole apron is made by Joe and one part-time assistant who has been there since 2018.

 

>> Claim Yours Before the Batch Is Gone << 

200 Aprons Left, The Next Batch of Oak-Bark Leather Will Not Be Ready Until 2027

As of this morning in Clearfield County, all 200 aprons remain. Joe wraps each one in unbleached kraft paper with a small cedar block inside to keep the leather supple during shipping. His assistant prints the labels. Joe writes a short note for every order with two things in it: how to break the leather in, and how to oil it once a season. He has been writing the same note for eleven years.

 

The price of $69 (against $149 to $199 at national retailers) is not a summer promotion. It is the price Joe set so that an apron made from 14 months of oak-bark tanning could reach American kitchens, workshops, and backyards directly, without a retail margin that doubles the price and tells you nothing about how the leather was made.

 

Every apron ships within 5 business days. 30-day return for any reason, return shipping covered. Joe has had eleven returns in eleven years. Nine of them were size exchanges.

 

"I bought this for my father for Father's Day. He has been grilling on our back deck every summer weekend for 30 years. When he opened it he pressed his thumb into the leather the way Joe's card says to, held it under the light for a minute, and said: 'This is what leather used to be.' He wore it the same afternoon." 

— Karen Simmons, Columbus, Ohio

 

"I am a butcher. I have worn every apron worth wearing in a professional kitchen. None of them last. I bought this one in March and wore it every day through April and May. The leather has already started showing where I work, darker along the lower left where I rest the knife between cuts. I have never owned an apron that paid attention. This one does." 

— David Lim, Seattle, Washington

 

At 5 orders per day, the last apron ships before the end of July. The hides currently in the Curwensville pits went in January 2026 and will not be ready until early 2027.

 

Earl Mercer's apron is in a glass case on Joe's workshop wall. It is 61 years old. It is in better condition today than the day Earl bought it in 1965.

 

That is what 14 months in an oak-bark pit looks like after a lifetime of use.

 

That is what Joe is making.

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