I’ve been sent photographs of my things being made before, but never a video. This is a step up.

In case you can’t tell, it’s a bridle leather belt, being made to measure for me by Charlie Trevor of Equus Leather. Charlie kindly offered a few weeks ago to make me a belt to try out the service.

Stitching belts is pretty much the same as stitching the welts of shoes or the apron of a split-toe. You use an awl to punch a hole and two pieces of linen thread are pulled through in opposite directions. Repeat with each punched hole, so the threads lock around each other all the way along. Easier with a belt, as it is straight – and faster.

Charlie was trained in saddlery, hence the use of bridle leather. As I’ve written about in a previous post on Bill Amberg, bridle leather is cut thicker and contains more oils, making it hard wearing and water resistant. It is also treated to work well against the skin, as it is used as such in horse harnesses.

That’s one reason most of the Equus belts can be single pieces of bridle leather, hand stitched in the same way as the Lined and Raised model you see here, but only around the buckle end where the leather is folded over and stitched together.

The Lined and Raised comprises three pieces of leather – a front, a back and a lining. The front and back are stitched together around the lining, requiring over 1000 stitches. Hence the difference in price: £150 rather than £35. The sandwiching of the leather lining between the two outer pieces is what gives the belt its ‘raised’ look along the centre.

Cheap belts are usually made with very thin pieces of leather on the outside (often corrected grain, so sprayed in plastic, if they’re very cheap) and a lining of board or a leather substitute to give them bulk.

Good dress belts are often made with two pieces of calf leather, and no lining. These are much softer, smarter and more flexible than bridle leather. I have a beautiful example from Hermès. But they will never last as long as bridle leather, which should last a lifetime and will mould to your hips whilst retaining its curved shape. What it gives up in smartness it gains in robustness – you wouldn’t wear it with a suit, or any worsted, but it goes very well with denim or tweed.


The images here show the belt being cut, from a square hide – created when it has its neck and sides cut off, before being split at the spine to create two ‘butts’ from which the belts can be sliced. The initial slices are done by hand, but then a plough gauge (the white roller in the shot above) is used to get precise widths. And a heated tool is used to mark where the holes will be punched.



The Lined and Raised belt is noticeably stiff when first worn. It is a beautiful object, definitely reminiscent of saddlery; but harder than you’re used to, even uncomfortable. Within the first few days it softened slightly, and Charlie says it will soften a lot more over the first year. Rather like a Brooks saddles, about which more later this week, it is a question of wearing in tough cowhide using nothing but your soft human flesh.

Equus is a small family business based in Northumberland. Charlie used to make a living making bespoke saddlery (and by riding) but the market for it has been destroyed by imports from Asia. So now it’s just belts, Equus being a new venture that was only started a couple of years ago. Good luck to him.

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Anonymous

I’ve got a question:

Having studied leather work for a few years myself I have a question. Why would one want a handstitched belt instead of a machine stitched one? If the thread, stitch, material and hence strength is the same, why bother? Yes, if done my hand it looks handmade and that’s the only reason I can come up with.
I sew my briefcases by hand because I can use a stitch not possible with a machine (and because I don’t have suitable machines). But a straight line on a belt?

Cheers,
Andur

Anonymous

Hello Simon,

When young, I wore beautiful suits to the office — flannels, tweeds, gabardines, loud diplomat stripes; but the invention of casual Friday followed by the invention of casual everyday pretty well killed that.

I currently wear tweed jackets w jeans but would like to acquire at least one heavy tweed 3-piece suit. Do you know of any place in the States that still sells them? JPress and Brooks did, but no more. Bespoke would also be OK, but I would want someonw who specializes in tweeds — they are not easy to work with.

Thanks much for your help.

Alex, Chicago.

Matt

Hi Simon. I’ve purchased a casual belt for jeans and such that I’ve enjoyed very much (seems it will Last a lifetime)
I’ve struggled to find good options for a high quality, simple leather dress belt — ideally offering colour to match shellncordovan shoes (would love to buy a single piece Howren shell cordovan belt but haven’t found a source)
Seems that the Equis leathers are all fairly chunky. Any recommendations for high quality leather dress belts?

Ian

I have two bridle leather belts from Equus, both of which I think are very good quality and will probably last for years. They are a little stiff at first and take a while to mould to your body shape (just like shoes).

I recommend thinking carefully about the hole position and spacing before any purchace. Consider the thickest and thinnest clothing you would wear the belt with. I chose a 3/4 inch spacing with an appropriate central hole position to accommodate these extremes.

A good service but I found Equus not to be very communicative about order status.