Skip to product information
1 of 5

Herrfurth #002 (dark green)

Herrfurth #002 (dark green)

Regular price €200,00 EUR
Regular price Sale price €200,00 EUR
Sale Sold out
Taxes included. Shipping calculated at checkout.

My favorite compact zip wallet, made from dark green reverse horse culatta. One side has those beautiful shell cordovan wrinkles, with white residue from the tanning process — it’s natural wax, and it’ll disappear as you use it. The other side shows off the roughout texture.

Inside, you'll find two spacious card slots hidden in a lining made of bright purple vegetable-tanned goat leather. The outer shell’s full-grain side is used on the inside.

You can even turn the lining inside out if you need to search the wallet thoroughly — a small detail I really like. The goat leather is also burnished and polished on the flesh side, so it just feels smooth and nice in your hand.

This is a very compact wallet, about 7 × 10 × 1.5 cm.

Hardware:

  • Heavy-duty Excella zipper
  • Old-school brass rivet holding a short strap
  • Metal bow shackle for belt or bag attachment

Each item is one of a kind due to the natural full grain texture of leather and the creative process. Everything particular about this item is as it should be.

View full details

Quality is a journey

Hand-stitched

Saddle stitch is the strongest seam that can't be replicated by a sewing machine... for sure it's an overkill.

Still the quality comes not from its toughness, but from the process and the journey. First through my hands and then in your own adventures.

My principles and choices

Avant-garde leather

Horse culatta

I'm mesmerized by horse culatta with shell cordovan traces and wrinkles.

It arrives with waxy residue and matte texture to be polished by your hands and develop a smooth shine.

What is horse culatta?

Heritage leathercraft

Made to last

Vegetable tanned full-grain leather is a very particular material. It won't stay brand new and perfect like a heavily coated chrome tanned leather.

Instead it develops character and patina, and this is how it can survive much longer, through changes.

The complete leather guide