About Us

Learn how Swift Leatherworks grew from a small desktop workspace in an apartment bedroom, to a slightly larger workshop in the Solarium of Love.

Intentional design

We create with intention. Our products solve real problems with clean design and honest materials.

Quality first

We obsess over the details and strive to deliver the best products at the best prices, every time.

Customer care

We're always on your side: keeping our loyal customers happy is our top priority and number one goal.

The story of Swift Leatherworks

Swift Leatherworks is the leather workshop of Bryan Swift—artist, musician, DJ, thrifter extraordinaire, and the mind behind Retromantics Vintage.

With Swift Leatherworks, our mission is simple: Produce high-quality leather goods using time-honored techniques, premium materials, and the finest leather available.

Our goal is to make things that are beautiful, stylish, and timeless, with a level of quality beyond the fashion industry status quo. Our stuff is built for good and made to last, but just in case, they’re also repairable, restorable, and guaranteed for life.

I started my leathercraft journey in 2019, in the midst of COVID-19, but my love of leather started many years before.

From the thrift store to the tannery

Back in 2010, when I was a full-time thrifter trying to grow the Retromantics brand, one of my specialties was buying and restoring vintage handbags from high-end labels like Coach, Dooney & Bourke, and Louis Vuitton.

My favorites were the late-80’s-early-90’s Coach bags, which were designed by the legendary Bonnie Cashin, and made from thick, greasy cowhide, or their signature Brazilian water buffalo leather (my personal favorite).

It amazed me that I could take a used leather bag that was almost 40 years old, and with a little bit of unscented hand lotion, saddle soap, and good old fashioned elbow grease, restore it to like-new condition.

That enduring quality, combined with Bonnie Cashin’s subtle, timeless designs, allows those Coach bags to remain both usable and fashionable not just for a few seasons, but for many, many decades—a feat seldom achieved by modern fashion houses.

As I was restoring those vintage Coach bags, I would often think, “Man, I wish I could make something like that.” Little did I know that just a few years later, I would be channeling that same commitment to quality, durability, and timeless style in my own leather creations.

Keychain with orange leather strap and metal clip on a white background

It all started with a keychain.

In 2011, a friend gave me a leather keychain for my birthday. It was called the Transit Issue Keychain, made by a company called Apolis. At the time, I’d never really considered the beauty of such a clean, minimalist design—the rifle sling clip, the no-nonsense corner stitching, and the raw beauty of vegetable tanned leather—it was the coolest keychain I’d ever seen.

I wore that keychain on my belt loop every day for almost ten years. I watched as a gorgeous patina overtook the leather, bringing it from its light tan origins to a deep mahogany that oozed the kind of character that can only come from a decade of honest use.

But then something terrible happened… the keychain broke. The four pieces of thread that held my keychain together had started to fray, and then they wore out completely. I kludged it back together with a couple of zip ties, but they looked out of place, almost silly when compared to the organic beauty of natural patina, and the scratched, scarred metal of the sling clip.

I decided that if I was going to keep using the keychain, I would have to stitch it back together myself. After many failed attempts using ‘regular’ needle and thread—neither of which work well with veg tan leather—I decided to learn how to fix it the right way.

Mastering an ancient art, one piece at a time

That first project taught me more than just how to cut and stitch — it opened my eyes to something deeper. I realized that I was stepping into an ancient craft, one that’s been woven into the fabric of civilization since the very beginning of history. Like woodworking or masonry, leatherworking is a craft that’s been passed down through generations. It has roots in every culture, on every continent, in every corner of the world.

When I sit at my workbench, I’m joining a global tradition of bending and shaping animal hides into beautiful, useful, one-of-a-kind creations. That little keychain set me on the path to becoming a craftsman, a maker, a true leather artisan. And the rest, as they say, is history.

— Bryan Swift