Every Escuyer leather piece begins the same way: with a choice. Not a catalogue selection, not a cost calculation — but a genuine decision about the right material, the right maker, and the right way to produce something worth keeping. The result is a leather goods collection that is small by design, unhurried by intention, and built to the kind of standard that only becomes apparent when you’ve owned something for a decade.
Before we describe the process in words, watch it in pictures. This short film, shot inside our atelier near Braga, shows exactly how each Escuyer leather piece is made — from the first cut to the final inspection.
Step 1 — The Sample: Hand-Cutting the First Piece
Before a single production piece is cut, every new Escuyer model begins with a sample. A pattern is drawn and cut entirely by hand — each component traced, scored, and trimmed with precision tools to establish the exact proportions, slot positions, and edge lines that will define the finished piece. This is the moment where design becomes object: where a sketch on paper becomes a real thing you can hold, test, and refine.
The sample is checked against the brief, adjusted where needed, and only approved once every detail is exactly right. It becomes the reference against which every subsequent production piece is measured.
Step 2 — The Leather: Vegetable-Tanned in Tuscany
Everything starts with the leather itself. Escuyer sources exclusively from Tuscany, Italy — the historic centre of European vegetable tanning and home to some of the finest tanneries in the world. The leather arrives at the atelier in full hides, already naturally tanned using plant-based tannins over a process that takes weeks rather than the hours required by industrial chrome tanning.
Vegetable-tanned leather often commands premiums of 50% to 200% over commodity chrome leathers, and the difference is felt immediately when you handle it: firmer, more structured, with a surface that responds to touch in a way that synthetic or cheaply tanned leather simply doesn’t. The hides are inspected on arrival — checked for consistency of colour, texture, and thickness before a single cut is made.
Step 3 — The Cutting: Every Piece by Hand
Once the leather is approved and the sample signed off, production cutting begins. Each cardholder and wallet is cut individually by hand using the approved templates — a process that requires both accuracy and an intimate knowledge of the hide. Not all parts of a leather hide are equal: the tighter, denser fibres from the back and rump produce the best results for pieces that need to hold their shape; the more open-grained areas are set aside. A skilled cutter knows instinctively which part of the hide belongs in which piece.
Step 4 — The Preparation: Skiving and Edge Treatment
Before stitching, each cut piece is skived — thinned at the edges using a specialist blade — to reduce bulk at the seams and ensure the finished piece sits flat and feels refined in the hand. This step is invisible in the finished product but makes an enormous difference to how the piece looks and ages. It’s the kind of detail that separates a properly made leather good from one that merely resembles one.
Step 5 — The Stitching: Precision by Machine and Hand
The stitching is where the piece truly takes shape. Escuyer’s artisans work on specialist leather stitching machines calibrated for the exact thickness and tension required by each piece. The thread is selected to complement the leather — matching or contrasting depending on the colourway — and every seam is checked for consistency before moving on.
Step 6 — The Edge Finishing: Where Quality Shows
The edges of a leather piece tell you everything about the quality of its making. On a poorly made piece, cut edges are left raw or simply folded under. On an Escuyer piece, every edge is burnished — rubbed and treated by hand to create a smooth, rounded, sealed finish that is both more beautiful and more durable than any shortcut alternative. It’s a slow process. It’s also, once you know to look for it, one of the clearest ways to distinguish a properly made leather piece from one that isn’t.
Step 7 — Assembly and Quality Control
Once all components are stitched and finished, the piece is assembled and inspected. Every cardholder and wallet that leaves the Escuyer atelier passes through a final quality check — examined for consistency of stitching, alignment of edges, evenness of colour, and the overall feel of the finished object in the hand. Pieces that don’t meet the standard are returned for correction or set aside. There are no exceptions.
Step 8 — The Gold Foil Stamp: The Escuyer Signature
Before the piece is complete, it receives its signature — the Escuyer name, hot-stamped in gold foil directly onto the leather. This is done using a heated metal die pressed against a thin sheet of gold foil, transferring the lettering cleanly and permanently into the surface of the hide. The result is a mark that is both discreet and unmistakable: a small, precise detail that identifies the piece as Escuyer without announcing itself.
Gold foil stamping is one of the oldest finishing techniques in leather goods — used by the finest maisons for centuries precisely because it ages so well. On vegetable-tanned leather, the stamp deepens and becomes more defined over time as the surrounding leather darkens, making the Escuyer name more visible the longer the piece is owned and used.
Step 9 — The Colour: A Simple Piece with a Twist
Most leather goods come in black, brown, or tan. Escuyer has never been particularly interested in safe. Our leather collection is built around colour — not as decoration or gimmick, but as a genuine design statement that reflects the same philosophy as our socks: that the objects you carry every day deserve to be worth looking at. A cognac cardholder. A violet wallet. A clorofilla green that makes you smile every time you take it out of your pocket.
These aren’t novelties — they’re the result of careful thinking applied to a classic, functional form. The design principle is simple: take something that works perfectly and make it in a colour that gives it personality without compromising its purpose.
Step 10 — The Packaging: The Final Touch
The last step before an Escuyer piece reaches its owner is the packaging — and it’s more personal than you might expect. Each box is assembled by hand, and on the inside, two things are written: the name of the model and the name of the artisan who made it. Not a printed label. A handwritten note, in pen, by the person who spent hours cutting, stitching, and finishing the piece you’re about to open.
It’s a small gesture with a large meaning. In an era of anonymous mass production, knowing the name of the person who made your cardholder is a rare and valuable thing. At Escuyer, we think it matters — and we think you should know it too.
Coming Soon — The Escuyer Card Sleeve
The Escuyer leather collection is about to get even more minimal. The card sleeve — our slimmest and most pared-back leather piece yet — is currently in development at the atelier near Braga. Same vegetable-tanned Tuscan leather. Same hand-finishing. Same colourful, considered design philosophy. Just less of everything else.
For those who carry two cards and nothing more, the card sleeve will be the definitive daily carry object. No stitching, no structure — just a single, perfectly formed piece of leather, folded and burnished to hold exactly what you need and nothing you don’t.
The card sleeve is coming soon. Explore the current leather collection in the meantime — and watch this space.
Built to Age Beautifully
What leaves the atelier is not the finished story of an Escuyer leather piece — it’s the beginning of one. Vegetable-tanned leather is alive in a way that industrially processed leather is not. It absorbs the natural oils of the skin. It softens at the points of most contact. It develops a patina — a deepening, darkening, individualising of the surface — that makes every piece unique to its owner over time.
The global leather goods market was valued at USD 531 billion in 2025, growing at a CAGR of 7.13% through 2034 — driven largely by rising consumer demand for premium, durable, and ethically produced goods. The resurgence of artisanal craftsmanship is a notable driver, with vegetable-tanned leather favoured for its durability, unique patina over time, and its use in high-end fashion and artisanal goods. At Escuyer, we’ve been working this way from the beginning — not because it became a trend, but because it’s the only way we know how to make things properly.
Shop the Escuyer Leather Collection
Every piece below is handcrafted near Braga, Portugal, from vegetable-tanned leather sourced in Tuscany. Cardholders from €75, slim and zip wallets from €110, billfold wallets from €140.
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