A visit to the new wallet factory! (Photos attached!)

Hey everyone!

Earlier this week, I made a trip to our new leather factory in the U.S. I’m very excited to have finally met all of the great people we have been working with on the phone and through email.  They are located in a small New England town and it is just a beautiful place. Old, colonial-ish homes are situated on every corner.  I was immediately drawn in by the romanticism of old, small-town New England.

This is a photo of Scott, the owner and manager, and I in the sewing room.

This is a photo of Scott, the owner and manager, and I in the sewing room.

The factory itself is located at the top of a very picture-esque residential street and, at first glance, seems very small. Once I stepped inside, however, I became aware that this was indeed a fairly size-able and highly skilled workshop.

This workshop also makes leather goods for King Ranch (as you will see in the photos) and also the cushions for the authentic Barcelona Chair. The people in the shop were all amazingly kind and friendly and happy to show us how they do what they do.

Enjoy the photos!  We are still waiting on the final prototype of the new design.  It will be coming shortly.

Hydraulic die cut presses

Hydraulic die cut presses

One of the shop's sewing stations

One of the shop's sewing stations

Attaching hardware to leather

Attaching hardware to leather

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Thoughts on magnets

So, I’ve been reading some of the comments regarding our new design (soon to be revealed to everyone, shortly!) and the use of magnets as an enclosure.  Since we’ve been using magnets in our wallets (May, 2009), we haven’t heard of any clients who have had problems with demagnetizing cards of any kind.

Of course, we did a bit of research into this before we made the final decision to use a magnetic closure.  The truth of the matter is that a magnetic stripe on a card requires a magnetic field of about 1000 Gauss in order to be demagnetized.  As a sense of scale: if you had two magnets that had a field potential of 1000 Gauss, the two magnets would slam together hard enough to seriously pinch your skin.  That is a STRONG field.  The magnets we use in our wallets would be akin to a ‘good’ fridge magnet of approximately 200-300 Gauss.

Although, how cool would it be if we picked up a Gauss Meter to accurately test the exact strengths of our magnets as proof? :)  I’m actually thinking about it.

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Protected: Unveiling: The first new design of 2010! (Currently for Braithwaite Clients, only)

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Customer service lessons from Kevin Smith vs. Southwest Airlines

Wow, between waking up this morning to a dozens of great comments on the blog for packaging suggestions and also to the whole Kevin Smith vs. Southwest Airlines affair, it has been a pretty eventful morning!

My brothers and I are big fans of the SModcast and were thoroughly entertained by how the tabloids and blogo-sphere are flaring up with this incident.

As someone who now operates a small business that relies heavily on customer service and also as a sales professional with LOTS of experience diffusing REALLY bad situations (the construction industry is notorious for this), I have to say that Southwest really did drop the ball with this one.

Now, a quick disclaimer, I don’t care who was “in the right” and who was “in the wrong” on this one but my experience has taught me that employees need to be empowered to make things right and not feel like they are going to be maligned for taking the extra steps required to help a client or customer; even if it is not “right” as per the company policy.  In this case, it seems that Southwest employees probably just didn’t have the power (or think they had the power) to make an un-orthodox executive decision to make all parties happy.  In the end, my belief is you can choose to be “right” or happy.

If I were in Eric’s role (the manager who took over in dealing with the incident at the time), I would have not waited for Suzanne (the flight attendant) to approach me with the issue, I probably would have JUMPED into the situation, thanked Suzanne for doing the right thing (per company policy and her training, [presumably]) and to allow me to see if I can help to make the situation better for everyone.

What would have made the situation better?  It sounds like just asking the passengers adjacent to Kevin if they were uncomfortable (which they did), talk with the captain to inform him that while it may be arguable that he may be too big, the adjacent customers/passengers don’t object to his sitting between them, and apologizing (actually saying the words, “I’m sorry”) to Kevin for the inconvenience and letting the flight depart without further incident.

As it stands now, there is now a media/blogger circus being made over the issue.  Which option would have cost less PR man-hours?  I’m pretty sure that there wouldn’t have been a single Tweet issued if Kevin was just allowed to make the flight home.

A good point being made is that Kevin is someone fortunate enough to have a ‘platform’ to stand on and to be vocal about the incident.  What about individuals who don’t have such a platform?  Would Southwest just ask them to leave the plane and not apologize for the inconvenience? Would they have even cared?

On a final note here, I’m just so glad that our clients are such great people to work with.  Not every client of ours is an evangelist (many are!) but their objections have been fair and we go the extra step to see if we can fix any uncomfortable situations. Usually they become evangelists after we take those extra steps, too!

So, “Thank You!” to every and all Braithwaite clients!  You are the ones who really make this business fun and who have kept the vision alive for this company.  I’m glad to be able to share this journey with you.

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Why we NEED to change our packaging

Sorry for the rant but here’s exactly how it is.

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Announcing Braithwaite Wallets 2010!

The Count Down has Begun!

This is going to be a great year for Braithwaite Wallets, and we invite you to join in the excitement!  If you haven’t heard already, there’s some great things happening, including some great changes to the company.  Ready to find out more?

Get the Introduction! (click the link or watch below)

Want to find out more?  Contact us!

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Christmas shipping deadlines

Just a quick note to let you know that in order to have a guaranteed Christmas delivery, you need to place you order on or before December 15th (in North America).  For international orders, you must have your order in before December 7th. However, we do have an extra fast shipping option available for any last minute orders but it is expensive ($38.60 USD via TNT Express).

So, let us help you make this a stress-free Christmas this year by taking advantage of our incredible 20% off discount and free shipping. Click here to let us take the load off.

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The Braithwaite Christmas (for that someone) Special!

In preparation for launching some new designs, we are offering the Braithwaite Christmas Special!  If you have created a new cart or gone to the Checkout, you will notice an automatic  10% off of your order.  But, when you buy two or more wallets as gifts this Christmas, you get bumped up to 20% off.

Since we offer free shipping within North America, this 20% off actually ends up being a nice chunk of change.

For example, if you were to buy an Orpheus wallet for that guitar playing friend of yours and a Raptured for your father, you would regularly be paying $234.  But with our Christmas Special, you will be paying less than $200. You will be paying only $187.20, including shipping.

You don’t need a coupon code for this discount, it happens automatically. So, go ahead and have confidence that you are buying the gift that actually does keep on giving because all of your gift recipients will be enrolled in our every day, extra-ordinary, “I-don’t-believe-it!” Lost Wallet Promise.  That’s right, the promise that states that if their wallet ever becomes lost or stolen, they just have to drop us a line letting us know and we will replace it for them.

Unbelievable, isn’t it?  Believe it.  Go to our Wallet Selection page right now and actually get your Christmas shopping done early this year.


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More historical wallet research

As I may have indicated before, there has never been an entry for “Wallet” in printed encyclopedias.  I’ve looked in ALL sorts of encyclopedias from all sorts of dates (as far back as 1911).  It seems that the wallet has always just been in people’s conciousness and we’ve never thought to really look at it before.  It seems to me so silly that a wallet, these days, is considered just a cheap bi-fold.  Where is the soul, the story in that?

Throughout the process of designing wallets and thinking about how a wallet can be optimized for a given man and what sorts of design decisions can be made, I’ve often found myself asking, “What did wallets look like before credit cards and paper currency?”  There is information out there about historical wallets but it requires a bit of creativity in order to find it.  You don’t just type “wallet history” into Google or in an encyclopedia or even in an article database.  I’m still learning, myself, how to best mine this rare ore of information from the mountains of our collected and printed knowledge but here are some more recent finds that I have made that I will be using to update Wikipedia’s “Wallet” article in the coming days:

Wallet usage in ancient times

The classicist, A.Y. Campbell, set out to answer the question, “What, in ancient literature, are the uses of a wallet?”  He deduced, as a Theocritean scholar, that “the wallet was the poor man’s portable larder; or, poverty apart, it was a thing that you stocked with provisions.”  He found that sometimes a man may be eating out of it directly but the most characteristic references allude to its being “replenished as a store”.

Wallet usage in the Renaissance

As metals became increasingly used as currencies, it seems that wallets took shape to include these coins, and in some cases, statements of accounts.

In recounting the life of the Elizabethan merchant, John Frampton, Lawrence C. Wroth describes the merchant as, “a young English-man of twenty-five years, decently dressed, …, wearing a sword, and carrying fixed to his belt something he called a ‘bowgett’ [or budget], that is, a leathern pouch or wallet in which he carried his cash, his book of accounts, and small articles of daily necessity”

It is my goal to have the most comprehensive collection of historical wallet information available and it will be a fun side project that I’m almost certain will be informing my sense of design as the company moves forward.

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Beginning the the process for new wallet designs…

I know everyone has been a little anxious to know how the process is going for the new line so I thought I would keep everyone updated on the process.  We are about to begin the prototyping process for our new men’s wallets line and are just in the process of solidifying which designers are on board.  This line will really be pushing the envelope creatively for us, will feature new textiles and colours, and will be an active response to the many requests we’ve been getting for ‘coins and cards’ styles of mens wallets.

Here’s  a roster of some of the designers that are going to be on board:

Almost everyone above is working on drawing right now.  We’ll be able to selectively release these new drawings for initial review to our current clientele (part of the benefits of membership).  Bottom line: if you own a Braithwaite, you’re on that list.  On the blog, we’ll be talking more about each of these designers and their backgrounds so you can get to know them a little bit but you won’t get to see any actual drawings unless you’re a client.

Just a quick heads up, 76% of our stock of Cypress is sold out (and the others are following not too far behind).  We understand that a lot of our prospective clients are waiting until the time is right for them to buy their wallet, and that’s great.  You still have some time left (it’s not like they are going to be gone tomorrow), but probably not much more than a month or two.  We’ll let you know on the blog here if anything else is starting to get really low in inventory so sign up for the RSS feed to keep updated.

Alright, that’s all for now!  Now that things have become a little less crazy with our shipping process (and MUCH more organized), we have time to blog more now!  We’re looking forward to producing this new line and we’ll be excited to talk about it as it happens.

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  • About Us

    Braithwaite Wallets, Inc.; is a men's wallet company that is owned and operated out of Calgary, Alberta in Canada. The company has existed since 2006 and we began selling wallets in March, 2008.

    This blog has been created to keep our current and prospective clients up-to-date on the latest news in wallet design and development as well as just to post bits and pieces (articles, music, etc.) that we find appealing and we wish to share with our clients.

    Braithwaite Wallets, Inc.