Card Wallet
About
Nomad sources leather from Horween, the Chicago tannery that has produced premium hides since 1905 using methods largely unchanged across generations. The vegetable-tanning process employed here avoids the chemical shortcuts of chrome tanning, producing material that responds to oils from hands and the wear of daily handling by developing a distinctive patina rather than simply degrading.
The wallet opens to reveal capacity for up to ten cards and a supply of folded currency, arranged in a configuration that keeps the most frequently accessed items immediately available. Microfiber lining cushions cards against scratching while contributing negligible weight or thickness. The construction eliminates decorative stitching and prominent branding, allowing material quality to speak without distraction.
At rest, the wallet presents a slim rectangle that pockets front or rear without creating the pronounced bulge that marks conventional bifolds. The leather's stiffness gradually yields with use, eventually conforming to its typical complement of cards while maintaining enough structure to prevent corner curling. Edges burnished to a smooth finish prevent fiber separation that would otherwise fray over time.
This represents wallet design reduced to fundamentals. The leather will outlast the cards it carries, the stitching securing structural seams will hold through years of extraction and replacement, and the understated appearance grows only more distinguished as the patina develops. Those who carry this wallet are making a quiet statement about values, choosing longevity and craftsmanship over disposable convenience.