Mocasines de ante Old Money
The pair most people should have bought first. Unstructured enough for denim, clean enough for dinner — it is the one loafer that handles ninety percent of a week without ever looking like it is trying.
Ranked by where you will actually wear them — not by which one photographs best. Every pair below is handmade suede or full-grain leather, and every one of them is currently discounted.
There is a specific kind of regret that comes from buying the wrong loafer. It arrives about four weeks in — the suede has gone shiny at the flex point, the sole has separated at the toe, and the shoe that looked so quietly expensive in the photograph now looks precisely as cheap as it was.
The problem is almost never the leather. It is that most people buy a loafer for an occasion they attend twice a year, and then wear it every day. A driving moccasin built for a warm terrace collapses under a commute. A structured leather loafer built for tailoring feels like a brick on a beach.
So this guide is organised around a single question: where will these live? Answer that honestly and the choice narrows to one or two pairs, quickly.
All eight pairs, in order. Swipe.
Eight pairs. Eight different lives.
The pair most people should have bought first. Unstructured enough for denim, clean enough for dinner — it is the one loafer that handles ninety percent of a week without ever looking like it is trying.
Same everyday silhouette, heavier suede, cleaner finish. If you have already worn a cheap loafer to death in one summer, this is the answer to why.
A driving loafer is the only shape that survives a terrace at six and a car at eight. Flexible enough to fold into a bag, finished enough to sit under linen.
The penny loafer is the most quietly formal shoe you can wear without a lace. It dresses a suit down and a blazer up, which is precisely the ambiguity you want at an event.
Suede reads softer than leather; a dark sole keeps it serious. This is the pair that lets you wear suede where the room would otherwise expect a lace-up.
More coverage, more structure, more shoe. When the terrace closes and the trousers get heavier, this is the loafer that carries the look into autumn.
No hardware, no horsebit, no statement. The Stirling is for the person who would rather be the best-dressed man in the room than the most noticeable one.
Full-grain cowhide takes longer to break in and then never lets go. Suede softens; leather develops. If you are buying for the next decade rather than the next season, buy leather.
Everything else is preference.
Suede is softer, breathes better, and forgives a poor fit in the first week. Leather is more formal, takes longer to break in, and develops a patina instead of wearing thin. If this is your first proper loafer, buy suede. If it is your third, buy leather.
A soft, flexible sole makes a loafer feel like a slipper and look relaxed — perfect with linen, wrong under a suit. A structured sole holds the shoe's line and sits correctly beneath tailoring. Almost every "this doesn't look right" moment traces back to the sole.
A loafer has no laces, so the heel is the only thing holding the shoe on. It should feel slightly tight when new and settle within a week. If your heel slips on day one, it will slip forever. Old Money runs EU sizing with UK and US conversions on every product page.
Spray it, then let it dry fully before it ever meets a pavement. Brush the nap back with a suede brush after every few wears. This is ten minutes of work that adds years — and it is the single reason some suede loafers look better at eighteen months than they did at one.
What the people who buy these loafers buy next.
Eighteen pairs of handmade suede and leather, all currently discounted. Free worldwide shipping over $100.
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