Navin323i
Practically Family
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JanSolo said:Because the wallet is made from the hide that spreads across the horse's butt. That can be quite a large piece of leather.
Cordovan is not made from the top layers of the skin but from a rather small but very dense and strong piece of connecting tissue that is located just between skin and muscle. This is called "Fascia" in Latin.
Every muscle needs a certain amount of connecting tissue to move freely under the skin. At some horse breed's croup or butt the connecting tissue is thick enough and therefore suitable to be made into cordovan. Strange stuff and the better, lighter coloured shells (caramel, whisky, cognac) cost a fortune, whereas black and oxblood remain affordable. Cordovan doesn't have a grain side...what you see is always the flesh side. But it's so heavily polished and finished (Horween calls it "smeared") that nobody notices.
Hope that helps.
Fascia basically encloses the muscles. When you have a true separation or tear of the fascia this results in what is known as a hernia. In my case my abdominal fascia is very weak so I'm prone to getting abdominal hernias which is why ultimately I went with Aero for my jacket so they could custom make me a jacket that could hide my belly bulge caused by the hernia. Basically, parts of my abdominal fascia have been reinforced with Gore-tex material held on with titanium tacks making my abdominal belly area a high tech one.