Hello, I'm designer Sola. While I currently practice minimalism, I used to be a master at "how to stuff my wallet full."
From band-aids to electronic dictionaries
Carrying band-aids in my wallet was a given. Since I often only had my wallet with me, they were incredibly handy for sudden injuries or for my kids.When traveling abroad, I'd sneak a card-sized electronic dictionary into my wallet—I'd just started learning English back then—so I could pull it out anytime. Plus, I didn't carry a cell phone on those trips, so I'd fold memo paper to wallet size and write tiny notes with a pen in my planner. I used it as a contact book for acquaintances and for jotting things down. Surprisingly
, despite cramming so much in, I managed to keep it remarkably thin.
It's precisely because of that experience of "stuffing" everything in that I now value "thinness."
It was precisely because I experienced packing to the absolute limit that I could see the boundary between what was truly necessary and what was unnecessary. The result of that trial and error is the current structure of Tenuis and Tynd. Incidentally, the hidden pocket found in both allows you to store items like band-aids and notepaper separately from the cash compartment.
TyndAnother slim solahanpu.com/products/ tynd -cv" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https:// solahanpu.com/products/ tynd -cv
Tenuis 3rd .com/products/ tenuis -third" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https:// solahanpu.com/products/ tenuis -third
Tenuis 4th .com/products/ tenuis -fourth" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https:// solahanpu.com/products/ tenuis -fourth



