Close-up macro photograph of aged leather grain texture with natural pores and patina

HEIRLOOM

Est. 2026 · Handcrafted

Objects that remember

Reserve Your Place

Raw, sourced,
irreplaceable.

Every piece begins with a material that already has history. We don't hide the grain, the casting marks, or the wax. These are not defects. They are evidence.

Close macro photograph of full-grain vegetable-tanned leather surface showing natural grain pores and warm amber patina

Full-Grain Leather

Vegetable-tanned in small batches. The surface darkens with palm oil over decades, developing a patina that maps every journey.

Sourced from tanneries in León and Córdoba

Macro close-up of solid brass buckle and hardware with tarnished patina and hand-filed edges catching directional light

Solid Brass Hardware

Cast and hand-filed. Each clasp carries a slight asymmetry — proof it was touched by someone who cared about the result.

Aged in salt air before finishing

Detail shot of waxed canvas fabric texture showing dark olive green surface with characteristic crease patterns and wax sheen

Waxed Canvas

British-milled cotton waxed three times. Water beads off the surface. Creases form where you fold it, becoming a record of use.

16oz cotton, triple-wax finish

Three acts.
No shortcuts.

Artisan hands carefully cutting leather with a sharp blade on a wooden workbench, leather scraps visible in soft directional light
Act I

The Cut

A single blade, kept at one angle for years. The leather is marked with a bone folder first — scored along the grain, not against it. Each cut is a decision that cannot be undone.

"No CNC. No laser. A hand and a knife."

Close-up of leather craftsperson burnishing the edge of a wallet with a bone tool, smooth amber leather surface catching warm workshop light
Act II

The Burnish

Edges are wetted with gum tragacanth and worked with a bone folder in long, patient strokes until the fibers compress and the surface becomes smooth as a river stone.

"Forty passes per edge. Minimum."

Macro detail of brass rivet being set into leather with a steel setting tool, showing the raw brass hardware against dark leather
Act III

The Setting

Brass rivets are set cold — no heat, no shortcuts. The die comes down once. The metal spreads and bites into the hide, locking the layers together for the next thirty years.

"Set once. Hold forever."

Four objects.
Each built once.

The first run is numbered. Not because scarcity is a strategy — because we can only make so many before the quality changes.

Chestnut brown leather bifold wallet placed on dark oak surface, showing natural grain and brass rivets in warm directional light

Chestnut Bridle · Brass Rivets

The Bifold

Full-grain bridle leather. Six card slots. One note compartment. Will outlast the bank cards inside it.

Cognac leather belt coiled on dark wood with solid brass tongue buckle visible, showing burnished edges and clean stitching

Cognac Harness · Solid Brass

The Belt

One-inch width. Solid brass tongue buckle. The leather will hold every buckle hole you've ever used.

Olive waxed canvas card sleeve with tan leather interior partially open, three cards visible, on dark oak surface

Olive Waxed Canvas · Tan Interior

The Card Sleeve

Three cards. Folded once. Waxed canvas exterior with a leather pull tab. The simplest object we make.

Dark tan leather folio open on dark oak table showing pen loop, notebook, and antiqued brass clasp hardware in moody studio light

Dark Tan · Antiqued Brass Clasp

The Folio

Holds a notebook, a pen, and two folded pages. The brass clasp clicks shut with a sound you'll look forward to.

Limited First Run

Reserve
Your Place.

First collection ships to the list only.
One email. No follow-up until we're ready.

No quantity listed. No countdown. The work speaks for itself.