- Dimensions: approx. 8 cm x 10.5 cm
- Material: 100% leather
- Contains non-textile parts of animal origin
The Top-Grain Scaffold: The foundation is a rich, vintage-toned brown leather that has been subjected to hand-sanding. In the tanner's world, this is a deliberate act of vandalism. By manually abrading the surface, they strip away the clinical perfection of the hide, exposing the grain underneath. It gives the wallet an immediate, pre-aged depth-a head start on the dark, oily patina it will eventually inherit from the friction of your pockets.
The Tactile Chaos: Set into the center of this weathered frame is a hair-on-hide inlay. Because it uses natural, un-sheared brindle hide, the pattern is entirely chaotic. One wallet might feature a dark, moody charcoal streak; another might look like sun-bleached prairie grass. It means that assembly-line uniformity is physically impossible here. You are carrying a completely unique piece of organic texture.
The Currency Anchor: Crowning the whole affair is a silver-coloured brand concho. Historically, these metallic discs were hammered out of old silver coins by Navajo smiths to embellish everything from bridles to heavy leather belts. Here, it serves as a heavy, metallic anchor-a structural punctuation mark that reminds you this object belongs to a lineage of utility, not boardroom aesthetics.
The Weight of the Exchange
Architecturally, the tri-fold is an unapologetic choice. It rejects the modern obsession with "invisible carrying." At roughly 8 cm by 10.5 cm, it possesses mass. It occupies space. When you slide it into a pocket, you know exactly where it is at all times. It forces a certain posture.
There is a distinct ritual to using a wallet like this. In a world where every transaction has been sanitized into a contactless wave of a smartphone or a watch against a piece of glass, pulling this object out of your pocket is a small, quiet rebellion. It has texture that catches on your fingers. It has a metallic weight that clinks when you set it down on a wooden bar. It smells like old tanneries, heavy grease, and time.
You don't buy an object like this because you want your life to be more streamlined. You buy it because you want your things to have a pulse. Long after the phone in your left pocket has been replaced by a newer, slicker model, this chunk of sanded hide and silver hardware will still be sitting in your right pocket-creased, stained with indigo from your jeans, and looking precisely like the life you've lived.