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Fun weekend project: baseball glove restoration

Creamer

Active Member
1,663
87
Athens
My son and I have watched a ton of videos online of baseball glove restorations. I had seen enough to convince myself it was do-able for me. I was looking for a winter project of some sort, and started watching ebay for deals. I finally found what I was looking for, a used and abused Wilson A2000 dual hinge glove. The price was right, and I grabbed it for about $40.



I started with a brief soak in warm water and allowed the glove to dry while propped open to try to reform the pocket area a little. It seemed to work pretty well. Next, I hit it hard with multiple rounds of Ballplayer's Balm cleaner.



I was firmly on the fence about relacing the glove. Yes, I wanted to do it, but that was the intimidating part of the project. The original laces were very worn, very cracked, and I figured they didn't have much life left in them. Laces were ordered, and I went with black for some contrast to the leather in the glove.



Many videos were watched on relacing, and I was very thankful that the content was available on YT. I found good videos on the specific parts of the glove I was most concerned about screwing up, mainly the palm area. A few other areas, I took the advice I read online and just retraced the new lace while removing the old. Any "tricky" areas I saw when I was removing the old lace, I would take a few pics with my phone so I could see where things needed to start/terminate and routes.









Finished product, relaced and 2 applications of glove conditioner.







I am pretty happy with the results. The only thing I did not replace was the thumb/pinky loops internally. They were in good shape, and I know their straps coming out aren't black like the rest of the lace, but it doesn't bother me. I made mistakes, think I corrected most of them, and learned a lot in the process. Little man's baseball league will start up soon, and now I've got a glove ready that fits me (unlike my old high school glove) so I can protect myself when he's hitting lasers back at my face. :oops:
 

Creamer

Active Member
1,663
87
Athens
Very nice Jeff! You also saved a ton of money. I remember buying Mason a Wilson 2000… they don’t give those away!

They're a quality glove, and that's why I waited (I'm not that patient, normally) for a decent deal to pop up on eBay. Most used ones were going for at least $90-100, so when this one showed up for $40 I felt like a bargain could be had. Luckily, the pics of the glove were good enough you could see the laces were mostly shot but the leather had no obvious tears, rips, or holes. It worked out!
 

Creamer

Active Member
1,663
87
Athens
The little guy kept asking about gloves since I did this project. As a surprise for him, I found a used Wilson A500 on eBay and grabbed it for him. I gave it a thorough cleaning and conditioning with the Ball Players Balm.





No relace needed on his glove. We played catch last night before dinner and he loved the new glove. I guess we're Wilson people now. :cool:

 

Dustinb80

#FACKCANCER
Supporting Member
18,768
198
S.W. Ohio
The little guy kept asking about gloves since I did this project. As a surprise for him, I found a used Wilson A500 on eBay and grabbed it for him. I gave it a thorough cleaning and conditioning with the Ball Players Balm.





No relace needed on his glove. We played catch last night before dinner and he loved the new glove. I guess we're Wilson people now. :cool:

Love love love it. I miss playing catch with my old man. I recently found our old gloves, the smell of the leather. Time has certainly set in on them. I don't think I'll throw them out though
 
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