

The belt you'd rather not explain.
Cuts to fit once. Holds without holes. Reads as a leather belt, behaves like a better one. Built in heritage colorways for the chinos-and-oxford end of the day, not the range.
The lattice — woven to give in one direction, hold in the other.
A traditional belt has one job and does it badly: it picks a hole and forgets the rest of your day. Sit down at lunch, the leather digs in. Stand up after a meeting, the slack rolls over.
The Lattice is high-tenacity stretch nylon, woven so the strap is vertically rigid — it won't sag under a wallet or a phone — but horizontally elastic by about half an inch. Your waist moves. The belt stays seated. You stop noticing it's there.
The buckle is anodized A380 aluminum with an N50 neodymium magnet paired to a hook-and-slot lock. The magnet is what your hand feels — the hook is what holds the load. Even at a full lateral pull, it doesn't pop.

One belt. Two colors. A buckle that turns to match.


A 360° pivot at the buckle base — so the belt rotates with you, not against the loops.
The Saddle, Cordovan, and Naval colorways are woven double-faced — saddle-tan on one side, ink black on the other. The buckle sits on a hardened steel pivot that rotates a full 360 degrees, so flipping the strap to the alternate color takes about three seconds without removing the belt from your loops.
Two belts, one purchase. The same Lattice goes from cordovan with cream chinos at lunch to ink black under a charcoal suit at four. No second buy, no second drawer.
Two pieces you'd buy anyway. Yours when you take The Outfit or The Rotation.
The leather belt hanger.
Hand-stitched vegetable-tanned leather, three brass hooks, mounts in any closet. Most men buy a belt hanger eventually — usually six months after the third pair of trousers. Skip that purchase and the search.
The leather-care kit.
Horsehair brush with a beech handle, neutral conditioner in an apothecary bottle, and a cotton polishing cloth — folded into a small canvas roll. Works on the new hanger and the leather belts you already own. The drugstore version of this kit is $34 and lasts half as long.
The math: 2 belts ($129.90) + hanger ($15) = $144.90 separately. Take The Outfit at $109 and you pocket $35.90 — and you skip the leather-belt-hanger Amazon search.
Add The OutfitA leather belt asks you to compromise three times a day. The Lattice doesn't ask.
The between-holes waist.
One hole is too tight, the next is too loose. By Tuesday you've stretched a hole bigger; by Friday you're punching a new one with a kitchen knife. The Lattice has no holes — it adjusts in increments your body actually has.
The after-lunch dig-in.
You sit down. The leather presses an inch into your stomach. You loosen a hole, the trousers sag. You tighten it again at three. The lattice gives a half-inch when you sit and pulls back when you stand. You stop performing this ritual.
The visible belt.
Most magnetic belts solve the engineering and lose the wardrobe — buckles the size of a hood ornament, webbing in tactical green. The Lattice is sized like a leather belt, finished in heritage colors. It reads as your old belt, behaves like the one you needed.
Where it goes — and where it doesn't get noticed.
Ink under a charcoal trouser and a tucked oxford. Reads as a quiet leather belt — until you realize there are no holes.
Cordovan with cream chinos and a polo. The colorway your wife buys you a leather version of for $300, in a belt that doesn't slip after the third course.
Ink for the office. Cordovan for everything else. Cream when the linen comes out. Three belts, one cut to your size — the only ones you'll buy this decade.
Two minutes. Kitchen shears. Then never again.
One belt size for every waist 28–48″. You set the length once when it arrives — no holes to wear out, no extra inches to stuff into a loop. Cut wrong on your first try? Email a photo and we send a fresh strap, free.
A small flathead screwdriver lifts the back panel of the buckle in one motion — the slot is recessed so it'll never pop accidentally on your waist.
The strap lifts straight out of the buckle housing. The toothed grip releases as soon as the back panel is open — no force, no fraying.
Loop the strap through your trousers, mark the length you want with the tip of the shears, cut once. Faint inch-marks on the strap give you a square edge every time.
Slide the cut end back into the buckle, press the back panel down until you feel the click. That's the lock engaging. Done — for as many years as you own the belt.
Cut wrong? It's covered. Email us a photo of the cut strap — we ship a fresh one, no return required, no question asked.
Shop the Lattice →327 reviews. Read the three-stars first — that's where the truth is.
I'd looked at Groove and a few others — engineering looked right, branding felt like I was joining a militia. The Ilume looks like a leather belt under my jacket and clicks shut faster than a buckle. Wore it through three client meetings and a long flight last week. No one mentioned it once. That's the bar.
I'm 5'10" 215 and my waist doesn't sit at any of the holes a Filson makes. Ate a real lunch on Thursday and didn't have to loosen anything. cut it once, snapped it on, that was three weeks ago. haven't thought about my belt since.
Got the Cordovan Stripe for him for his birthday. He's worn it every day since. He flips it black-side-out for work and cordovan on weekends. Already eyeing the Bottle for summer.
I like the belt. Comfortable, easy to adjust, looks fine under a tucked shirt. Honestly though, $65 is a lot for a belt and I'm not sure the magnet is doing more than a regular buckle would. I'll keep it but I wouldn't buy a second one at full price.
Best one I've owned. Will be buying another in Cordovan.
I'm 71 and the prong-and-hole arrangement isn't getting easier on my hands. The magnet snaps in one motion. Got the Saddle Stripe — black side under a jacket Monday through Friday, saddle out on the weekend. Wife thinks I bought two.
For the rest of the closet — and the belt itself.
Vegetable-tanned tan leather with a brass D-ring and three brass hooks. Holds three Lattices, or two Lattices and a leather belt. Mounts on a closet hook or a wall.
Horsehair brush with a beech handle, neutral conditioner in an apothecary bottle, polishing cloth, all rolled into a small canvas pouch. Works on the hanger, the buckle, and the leather belts you're not getting rid of yet.
The buckle pops off in two seconds. With one strap and two buckles, the same belt reads matte-corporate on Tuesday and warm-heritage on Friday. The Aged Brass works particularly well with the Cream Stripe.
The real competitor isn't another belt — it's the leather one in your closet.
The questions worth asking before you order.
No — and it's the most-asked question we get. The magnet you feel when it clicks shut isn't what's holding the load; that's a hook-and-slot lock that engages mechanically. The strap can't slide back through it under normal lateral force. The 500-cycle wear test we run on every webbing batch shows zero relaxation.
If yours does slip, it's a defect — send it back, we replace it, both ways shipped on us.
Four steps with kitchen shears, two minutes. The full walkthrough with photos is in the Cut to Fit section above.
If you cut it wrong, that's covered too. Email us a photo of the strap and we ship a fresh one — no return required, no question asked.
The buckle housing is anodized A380 aluminum — TSA-friendly and clears most walk-through detectors. Millimeter-wave body scanners may flag the magnet itself; treat it the way you'd treat a watch and remove if asked.
If you fly weekly and prefer a no-metal alternative, our Trellis line (releasing Q3) uses an all-polymer buckle. Email us and we'll flag your account.
The magnet is N50 neodymium — strong, but rated at less than 1 gauss six inches away. That's well under the 10-gauss threshold most pacemaker manufacturers list as a precaution. We still recommend you consult your cardiologist if you have an implanted device. Modern chip-and-PIN credit cards are unaffected; old magstripe cards left directly against the buckle for hours can demagnetize, so don't store cards in the same drawer.
Yes to both. In The Outfit and The Rotation, you can pick whatever combination you want — two of the same, two different, three of three. Most people pick at least one reversible (the Saddle, Cordovan, or Naval Stripe) so the bundle effectively gives them four or five looks instead of two or three.
If you order The Solo and decide a week later you want a second belt, email us — we'll honor The Outfit pricing on your second order within 30 days, retroactively crediting the difference and shipping the hanger free. Within 30 days of order one, you can upgrade to The Rotation the same way.
The engineering — the lattice webbing, the magnet-and-hook buckle — is at parity with the most-engineered belts in the category. We're not telling you ours is materially better. It isn't.
What you're paying for is what's around the engineering: heritage colors instead of camo and patriotic prints, a return policy that doesn't bill you $15 to use the warranty, and a brand voice your wife won't roll her eyes at. If those don't matter to you, buy the other one. They make a good belt.
Send it back within 30 days for a full refund. We pay shipping both ways — the inbound prepaid label is in your inbox the moment you start a return. No restocking fee, no fine print, no "must be unworn" clause. Wear it for a week. If it's not for you, we'll handle it.
A belt is the small piece of your wardrobe you'll touch a thousand times this year. Make it three of them.
The Outfit at $109 — two belts and a leather hanger, $35.90 less than buying the pieces separately. The Rotation at $149 — three belts, hanger, and care kit, $80.85 in savings. One size, lifetime backing, free both-way returns.
Add The Outfit