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How to measure correctly?

Tips for measuring: The circumference measured at the height of the belt loop plus an additional 13 cm gives the correct belt length. Example: Circumference 91 cm plus 13 cm gives 104 cm. The optimal belt length in this case is 105 cm.

Belt as a gift: An existing belts can also be measured: The length from the buckle to the most commonly used belt hole corresponds to Hip circumference, i.e. take this length and add 13cm, which gives the belt length.

 

Caution: Never measure the entire belts , as belts have belt ends of different lengths.

Belt sizes adults

Belt sizehip circumference
90cm75-79cm / 29.5-31.1in
95cm80-84cm / 31.5-33.1in
100cm85-89cm / 33.5-35in
105cm90-94cm/35.4-37in
110cm95-99cm/37.4-39in
115cm100-104cm/39.4-40.9in
120cm105-109cm/41.3-42.9in
125cm110-114cm/43.3-44.9in
130cm115-119cm/45.3-46.9in

Leather with a promising future

We use 100 percent sustainable cowhide, which we source from "Regional Leather" . The animals have been treated with respect and have spent their lives on a regenerative, organic or other sustainable farm. "Regionales Leder" works with several small, local slaughterhouses in Germany and Switzerland as well as small farms.

The tanning is chrome-free and vegetable-based, carried out by a traditional company in southern Germany, so we can trace where and how the cow lived and how the tanning took place.

Belt tip

Appenzeller_belt_whole_gold-3

Buckle

Handicraft from Appenzellerland

The Appenzell belt is a piece of old Swiss tradition. The belts used to be made of handmade metal fittings showing Alpine motifs such as alpine dairymen, suns, ornaments and cows. The more ornaments there were on the belt, the richer the wearer was.

Today there are only a handful of producers left in Appenzell. Daniel Fuchs is one of the few and a third-generation saddler. Much has remained the same: The cutting of the leather, the arrangement of the elements, the ornaments are, however, only made by hand in individual cases. The brass and nickel silver ornaments are stamped, but always according to the respective pattern of the Sennensattler. They are thus the signature of the maker and the eye of the connoisseur recognises a Fuchs, Fässler or Bachmann.

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Promising for the future
Leather

We use 100 percent sustainable cowhide, which we source from "Regional Leather" . The animals have been treated with respect and have spent their lives on a regenerative, organic or other sustainable farm. "Regionales Leder" works with several small, local slaughterhouses in Germany and Switzerland as well as small farms.

The tanning is chrome-free and vegetable-based, carried out by a traditional company in southern Germany, so we can trace where and how the cow lived and how the tanning took place.

LEITHELD_2019_171

Belt tip

Buckle

Handicraft from Appenzellerland

The Appenzell belt is a piece of old Swiss tradition. The belts used to be made of handmade metal fittings showing Alpine motifs such as alpine dairymen, suns, ornaments and cows. The more ornaments there were on the belt, the richer the wearer was.

Today there are only a handful of producers left in Appenzell. Daniel Fuchs is one of the few and a third-generation saddler. Much has remained the same: The cutting of the leather, the arrangement of the elements, the ornaments are, however, only made by hand in individual cases. The brass and nickel silver ornaments are stamped, but always according to the respective pattern of the Sennensattler. They are thus the signature of the maker and the eye of the connoisseur recognises a Fuchs, Fässler or Bachmann.

4954