Ellis Square Snap Wallet by Spartina 449
Cards, cards, so many cards and not enough places to put them! We've got help. With 15 card slots, it's a snap!
The Ellis Square pattern is part of Spartina's Passage to Savannah collection - inspired by legendary notables and historic squares, you'd find pieces of history and mystery woven into each pattern. Most of all, you'll see how priveleged we are to have one of the "10 Most Beautiful Places in America" in Daufuskie's own backyard.
Savannah's Ellis Square is testament to perseverance, not merely for its first 200 years as a bustling marketplace square, but rather for its restoration from becoming a parking lot in 1954. The bleak parking lot, however, gave rise to the Savannah preservation movement, which brought back Ellis Square to its rightful beauty in 2010, crowned by a bronze statue of native son and famous songwriter Johnny Mercer.
Recalling dapper, crosshatch menswear patterns and Savannah's cobblestone streets, Spartina created the Ellis Square pattern to use both positive and negative space in its design. This on-trend, always-elegant look is destined to be a favorite, as Mercer would say, come rain or come shine.
Cards, cards, so many cards and not enough places to put them! We've got help. With 15 card slots, it's a snap!
- Signature linen with leather accents
- Mermaid button and snap closure
- Exterior zip pocket
- Polyester interior lining
- 15 interior card slots
- 2 bill slots with ID window
- Interior zip pocket and pen tab
- Length: 8"
- Width: 5"
- Depth: 0.75"
The Ellis Square pattern is part of Spartina's Passage to Savannah collection - inspired by legendary notables and historic squares, you'd find pieces of history and mystery woven into each pattern. Most of all, you'll see how priveleged we are to have one of the "10 Most Beautiful Places in America" in Daufuskie's own backyard.
Savannah's Ellis Square is testament to perseverance, not merely for its first 200 years as a bustling marketplace square, but rather for its restoration from becoming a parking lot in 1954. The bleak parking lot, however, gave rise to the Savannah preservation movement, which brought back Ellis Square to its rightful beauty in 2010, crowned by a bronze statue of native son and famous songwriter Johnny Mercer.
Recalling dapper, crosshatch menswear patterns and Savannah's cobblestone streets, Spartina created the Ellis Square pattern to use both positive and negative space in its design. This on-trend, always-elegant look is destined to be a favorite, as Mercer would say, come rain or come shine.