Tom of Finland Foundation
Accepting submissions for the Emerging Artist Competition—apply below ⬇️

This International Day Against Homophobia, Biphobia, and Transphobia, we’re asking our community to help protect Queer art and history.
At a time when LGBTQ+ expression continues to face censorship and erasure, Tom of Finland Foundation remains committed to preserving one of the world’s largest archives of Queer art and keeping TOM House open as a living space for artists, culture, and community.
But we cannot do this work alone.
If Tom of Finland, TOM House, or Queer art has ever made you feel seen, inspired, or connected, please consider making a donation today. Your support helps preserve LGBTQ+ artwork, sustain our historic home, and protect Queer creative expression for generations to come.
Donate at the link in bio.

TOM House is seeking volunteers and interns to support ongoing restoration, maintenance, and collections work. An incredible opportunity to contribute to the care of a historic landmark in Los Angeles.
Email us at volunteers@tomoffinland.org.

TOM House is seeking volunteers and interns to support ongoing restoration, maintenance, and collections work. An incredible opportunity to contribute to the care of a historic landmark in Los Angeles.
Email us at volunteers@tomoffinland.org.

TOM House is seeking volunteers and interns to support ongoing restoration, maintenance, and collections work. An incredible opportunity to contribute to the care of a historic landmark in Los Angeles.
Email us at volunteers@tomoffinland.org.

TOM House is seeking volunteers and interns to support ongoing restoration, maintenance, and collections work. An incredible opportunity to contribute to the care of a historic landmark in Los Angeles.
Email us at volunteers@tomoffinland.org.

TOM House is seeking volunteers and interns to support ongoing restoration, maintenance, and collections work. An incredible opportunity to contribute to the care of a historic landmark in Los Angeles.
Email us at volunteers@tomoffinland.org.

TOM House is seeking volunteers and interns to support ongoing restoration, maintenance, and collections work. An incredible opportunity to contribute to the care of a historic landmark in Los Angeles.
Email us at volunteers@tomoffinland.org.

TOM House isn’t just history on display—it’s a working archive where Queer art is still being preserved, studied, and created.
This month, step inside the headquarters of Tom of Finland Foundation on a House Tour and experience the legacy up close.
Book a tour at the link in bio.

TOM House isn’t just history on display—it’s a working archive where Queer art is still being preserved, studied, and created.
This month, step inside the headquarters of Tom of Finland Foundation on a House Tour and experience the legacy up close.
Book a tour at the link in bio.

From Socrates and Sappho to Oscar Wilde and Elton John, LGBTQ+ individuals have shaped art, culture, music, literature, and history for centuries.
Join Gregorio Luke for "Gay Greatness," a multimedia presentation exploring the achievements, struggles, and lasting impact of LGBTQ+ figures across generations, while honoring those lost to persecution, the Holocaust, and the AIDS epidemic.
@gregorio.luke
@gk94110
Head over to the link in bio for details.

From Socrates and Sappho to Oscar Wilde and Elton John, LGBTQ+ individuals have shaped art, culture, music, literature, and history for centuries.
Join Gregorio Luke for "Gay Greatness," a multimedia presentation exploring the achievements, struggles, and lasting impact of LGBTQ+ figures across generations, while honoring those lost to persecution, the Holocaust, and the AIDS epidemic.
@gregorio.luke
@gk94110
Head over to the link in bio for details.

From Socrates and Sappho to Oscar Wilde and Elton John, LGBTQ+ individuals have shaped art, culture, music, literature, and history for centuries.
Join Gregorio Luke for "Gay Greatness," a multimedia presentation exploring the achievements, struggles, and lasting impact of LGBTQ+ figures across generations, while honoring those lost to persecution, the Holocaust, and the AIDS epidemic.
@gregorio.luke
@gk94110
Head over to the link in bio for details.

New on the Revue in collaboration with Tom of Finland Foundation
Assembled Desire: On the Collages of Tom of Finland
by Nicolo Gentile
This week Collé publishes Gentile’s essay Assembled Desire, a close reading of the cut and paste reference pages Touko Laaksonen built from physique magazines and print material in the 1950s.
Nicolo argues that the collages are not preparatory but generative, the infrastructure through which the iconic Tom of Finland figure was assembled rather than invented. He situates the work within a longer history of queer image-making under scrutiny, where collage offered a way to assemble what could not yet be shown outright, and proposes that the same logic — identity composed through selection, repetition, and recombination — has only become more urgent in an era of algorithmically managed visibility.
Tom’s Stretch, a group exhibition engaging with Tom of Finland’s radical ability to imagine a physique—and a world—that did not yet exist in popular culture, opens at David Kordansky Gallery Los Angeles on July 10, 2026.
Read the full essay by visiting the link in bio.
@nicologentile
@tomoffinlandfoundation
@davidkordanskygallery
@atelierpardon

New on the Revue in collaboration with Tom of Finland Foundation
Assembled Desire: On the Collages of Tom of Finland
by Nicolo Gentile
This week Collé publishes Gentile’s essay Assembled Desire, a close reading of the cut and paste reference pages Touko Laaksonen built from physique magazines and print material in the 1950s.
Nicolo argues that the collages are not preparatory but generative, the infrastructure through which the iconic Tom of Finland figure was assembled rather than invented. He situates the work within a longer history of queer image-making under scrutiny, where collage offered a way to assemble what could not yet be shown outright, and proposes that the same logic — identity composed through selection, repetition, and recombination — has only become more urgent in an era of algorithmically managed visibility.
Tom’s Stretch, a group exhibition engaging with Tom of Finland’s radical ability to imagine a physique—and a world—that did not yet exist in popular culture, opens at David Kordansky Gallery Los Angeles on July 10, 2026.
Read the full essay by visiting the link in bio.
@nicologentile
@tomoffinlandfoundation
@davidkordanskygallery
@atelierpardon

New on the Revue in collaboration with Tom of Finland Foundation
Assembled Desire: On the Collages of Tom of Finland
by Nicolo Gentile
This week Collé publishes Gentile’s essay Assembled Desire, a close reading of the cut and paste reference pages Touko Laaksonen built from physique magazines and print material in the 1950s.
Nicolo argues that the collages are not preparatory but generative, the infrastructure through which the iconic Tom of Finland figure was assembled rather than invented. He situates the work within a longer history of queer image-making under scrutiny, where collage offered a way to assemble what could not yet be shown outright, and proposes that the same logic — identity composed through selection, repetition, and recombination — has only become more urgent in an era of algorithmically managed visibility.
Tom’s Stretch, a group exhibition engaging with Tom of Finland’s radical ability to imagine a physique—and a world—that did not yet exist in popular culture, opens at David Kordansky Gallery Los Angeles on July 10, 2026.
Read the full essay by visiting the link in bio.
@nicologentile
@tomoffinlandfoundation
@davidkordanskygallery
@atelierpardon

New on the Revue in collaboration with Tom of Finland Foundation
Assembled Desire: On the Collages of Tom of Finland
by Nicolo Gentile
This week Collé publishes Gentile’s essay Assembled Desire, a close reading of the cut and paste reference pages Touko Laaksonen built from physique magazines and print material in the 1950s.
Nicolo argues that the collages are not preparatory but generative, the infrastructure through which the iconic Tom of Finland figure was assembled rather than invented. He situates the work within a longer history of queer image-making under scrutiny, where collage offered a way to assemble what could not yet be shown outright, and proposes that the same logic — identity composed through selection, repetition, and recombination — has only become more urgent in an era of algorithmically managed visibility.
Tom’s Stretch, a group exhibition engaging with Tom of Finland’s radical ability to imagine a physique—and a world—that did not yet exist in popular culture, opens at David Kordansky Gallery Los Angeles on July 10, 2026.
Read the full essay by visiting the link in bio.
@nicologentile
@tomoffinlandfoundation
@davidkordanskygallery
@atelierpardon

New on the Revue in collaboration with Tom of Finland Foundation
Assembled Desire: On the Collages of Tom of Finland
by Nicolo Gentile
This week Collé publishes Gentile’s essay Assembled Desire, a close reading of the cut and paste reference pages Touko Laaksonen built from physique magazines and print material in the 1950s.
Nicolo argues that the collages are not preparatory but generative, the infrastructure through which the iconic Tom of Finland figure was assembled rather than invented. He situates the work within a longer history of queer image-making under scrutiny, where collage offered a way to assemble what could not yet be shown outright, and proposes that the same logic — identity composed through selection, repetition, and recombination — has only become more urgent in an era of algorithmically managed visibility.
Tom’s Stretch, a group exhibition engaging with Tom of Finland’s radical ability to imagine a physique—and a world—that did not yet exist in popular culture, opens at David Kordansky Gallery Los Angeles on July 10, 2026.
Read the full essay by visiting the link in bio.
@nicologentile
@tomoffinlandfoundation
@davidkordanskygallery
@atelierpardon

New on the Revue in collaboration with Tom of Finland Foundation
Assembled Desire: On the Collages of Tom of Finland
by Nicolo Gentile
This week Collé publishes Gentile’s essay Assembled Desire, a close reading of the cut and paste reference pages Touko Laaksonen built from physique magazines and print material in the 1950s.
Nicolo argues that the collages are not preparatory but generative, the infrastructure through which the iconic Tom of Finland figure was assembled rather than invented. He situates the work within a longer history of queer image-making under scrutiny, where collage offered a way to assemble what could not yet be shown outright, and proposes that the same logic — identity composed through selection, repetition, and recombination — has only become more urgent in an era of algorithmically managed visibility.
Tom’s Stretch, a group exhibition engaging with Tom of Finland’s radical ability to imagine a physique—and a world—that did not yet exist in popular culture, opens at David Kordansky Gallery Los Angeles on July 10, 2026.
Read the full essay by visiting the link in bio.
@nicologentile
@tomoffinlandfoundation
@davidkordanskygallery
@atelierpardon

New on the Revue in collaboration with Tom of Finland Foundation
Assembled Desire: On the Collages of Tom of Finland
by Nicolo Gentile
This week Collé publishes Gentile’s essay Assembled Desire, a close reading of the cut and paste reference pages Touko Laaksonen built from physique magazines and print material in the 1950s.
Nicolo argues that the collages are not preparatory but generative, the infrastructure through which the iconic Tom of Finland figure was assembled rather than invented. He situates the work within a longer history of queer image-making under scrutiny, where collage offered a way to assemble what could not yet be shown outright, and proposes that the same logic — identity composed through selection, repetition, and recombination — has only become more urgent in an era of algorithmically managed visibility.
Tom’s Stretch, a group exhibition engaging with Tom of Finland’s radical ability to imagine a physique—and a world—that did not yet exist in popular culture, opens at David Kordansky Gallery Los Angeles on July 10, 2026.
Read the full essay by visiting the link in bio.
@nicologentile
@tomoffinlandfoundation
@davidkordanskygallery
@atelierpardon

New on the Revue in collaboration with Tom of Finland Foundation
Assembled Desire: On the Collages of Tom of Finland
by Nicolo Gentile
This week Collé publishes Gentile’s essay Assembled Desire, a close reading of the cut and paste reference pages Touko Laaksonen built from physique magazines and print material in the 1950s.
Nicolo argues that the collages are not preparatory but generative, the infrastructure through which the iconic Tom of Finland figure was assembled rather than invented. He situates the work within a longer history of queer image-making under scrutiny, where collage offered a way to assemble what could not yet be shown outright, and proposes that the same logic — identity composed through selection, repetition, and recombination — has only become more urgent in an era of algorithmically managed visibility.
Tom’s Stretch, a group exhibition engaging with Tom of Finland’s radical ability to imagine a physique—and a world—that did not yet exist in popular culture, opens at David Kordansky Gallery Los Angeles on July 10, 2026.
Read the full essay by visiting the link in bio.
@nicologentile
@tomoffinlandfoundation
@davidkordanskygallery
@atelierpardon

Tom of Finland is the artist name of Finnish Touko Laaksonen (1920, Kaarina – 1991, Helsinki). He signed his erotic work “Tom,” and when his drawings were first published in 1957, the now world-famous Tom of Finland was born. “Touko Laaksonen” remained his formal name for family and colleagues, while friends and fans simply call him “Tom.” His given name, "Touko", comes from his birth on 8th May 1920 on Finland’s southwest coast—Toukokuu is the Finnish word for May.
He transformed his attraction into images of confident, self-possessed men, building a visual language of desire, strength, and freedom that continues to resonate today 🖤
Celebrate with us—make art, dress up, and share using #TomOfFinlandDay
Photo by @robertmapplethorpefoundation
Calendar by @peachykingsshop

Tom of Finland is the artist name of Finnish Touko Laaksonen (1920, Kaarina – 1991, Helsinki). He signed his erotic work “Tom,” and when his drawings were first published in 1957, the now world-famous Tom of Finland was born. “Touko Laaksonen” remained his formal name for family and colleagues, while friends and fans simply call him “Tom.” His given name, "Touko", comes from his birth on 8th May 1920 on Finland’s southwest coast—Toukokuu is the Finnish word for May.
He transformed his attraction into images of confident, self-possessed men, building a visual language of desire, strength, and freedom that continues to resonate today 🖤
Celebrate with us—make art, dress up, and share using #TomOfFinlandDay
Photo by @robertmapplethorpefoundation
Calendar by @peachykingsshop

We’re celebrating TOM’s birthday early and extending the Emerging Artists Competition registration by two weeks—giving artists more time to submit work exploring sexuality, identity, and boundary-pushing expression across photography, painting, sculpture, digital work, and more.
Head over to the link in bio for details.

Behind The Look
Luke Evan’s Met Gala ensemble draws from the bold, graphic sensuality of Tom of Finland, echoing his precise linework, celebration of subcultures, and unapologetic eroticism.
Our creative director @alejandrogomezpalomo explains:
‘’Tom of Finland and his universe have always been part of my imagination, my inspiration, and my work. It is inevitable to look to one of the great illustrators of 20th-century gay culture as a reference: an artist capable of creating a visual language that is so sexy, so masculine, so charged with eroticism, but also with humor, freedom, and a profound fascination with male beauty. That imagery connects naturally with the sensibility of Palomo, a house that has historically explored desire, identity, sensuality, and new ways of understanding masculinity.
To see such a powerful representation of queer art on the Met carpet, and for it to be worn by a member of our own community, fills me with pride and emotion. For me, this suit is not just a fashion piece: it is a tribute to a visual, emotional, and political genealogy that came before us and continues to pave the way.’’
Thank you @thereallukeevans, @purplepr, @chrisbrownstylist and @voguemagazine
Polaroid imagery by @chrisbrownstylist
#PalomoBoy #PalomoSpain #MetGala2026

Behind The Look
Luke Evan’s Met Gala ensemble draws from the bold, graphic sensuality of Tom of Finland, echoing his precise linework, celebration of subcultures, and unapologetic eroticism.
Our creative director @alejandrogomezpalomo explains:
‘’Tom of Finland and his universe have always been part of my imagination, my inspiration, and my work. It is inevitable to look to one of the great illustrators of 20th-century gay culture as a reference: an artist capable of creating a visual language that is so sexy, so masculine, so charged with eroticism, but also with humor, freedom, and a profound fascination with male beauty. That imagery connects naturally with the sensibility of Palomo, a house that has historically explored desire, identity, sensuality, and new ways of understanding masculinity.
To see such a powerful representation of queer art on the Met carpet, and for it to be worn by a member of our own community, fills me with pride and emotion. For me, this suit is not just a fashion piece: it is a tribute to a visual, emotional, and political genealogy that came before us and continues to pave the way.’’
Thank you @thereallukeevans, @purplepr, @chrisbrownstylist and @voguemagazine
Polaroid imagery by @chrisbrownstylist
#PalomoBoy #PalomoSpain #MetGala2026

Behind The Look
Luke Evan’s Met Gala ensemble draws from the bold, graphic sensuality of Tom of Finland, echoing his precise linework, celebration of subcultures, and unapologetic eroticism.
Our creative director @alejandrogomezpalomo explains:
‘’Tom of Finland and his universe have always been part of my imagination, my inspiration, and my work. It is inevitable to look to one of the great illustrators of 20th-century gay culture as a reference: an artist capable of creating a visual language that is so sexy, so masculine, so charged with eroticism, but also with humor, freedom, and a profound fascination with male beauty. That imagery connects naturally with the sensibility of Palomo, a house that has historically explored desire, identity, sensuality, and new ways of understanding masculinity.
To see such a powerful representation of queer art on the Met carpet, and for it to be worn by a member of our own community, fills me with pride and emotion. For me, this suit is not just a fashion piece: it is a tribute to a visual, emotional, and political genealogy that came before us and continues to pave the way.’’
Thank you @thereallukeevans, @purplepr, @chrisbrownstylist and @voguemagazine
Polaroid imagery by @chrisbrownstylist
#PalomoBoy #PalomoSpain #MetGala2026

Behind The Look
Luke Evan’s Met Gala ensemble draws from the bold, graphic sensuality of Tom of Finland, echoing his precise linework, celebration of subcultures, and unapologetic eroticism.
Our creative director @alejandrogomezpalomo explains:
‘’Tom of Finland and his universe have always been part of my imagination, my inspiration, and my work. It is inevitable to look to one of the great illustrators of 20th-century gay culture as a reference: an artist capable of creating a visual language that is so sexy, so masculine, so charged with eroticism, but also with humor, freedom, and a profound fascination with male beauty. That imagery connects naturally with the sensibility of Palomo, a house that has historically explored desire, identity, sensuality, and new ways of understanding masculinity.
To see such a powerful representation of queer art on the Met carpet, and for it to be worn by a member of our own community, fills me with pride and emotion. For me, this suit is not just a fashion piece: it is a tribute to a visual, emotional, and political genealogy that came before us and continues to pave the way.’’
Thank you @thereallukeevans, @purplepr, @chrisbrownstylist and @voguemagazine
Polaroid imagery by @chrisbrownstylist
#PalomoBoy #PalomoSpain #MetGala2026

Behind The Look
Luke Evan’s Met Gala ensemble draws from the bold, graphic sensuality of Tom of Finland, echoing his precise linework, celebration of subcultures, and unapologetic eroticism.
Our creative director @alejandrogomezpalomo explains:
‘’Tom of Finland and his universe have always been part of my imagination, my inspiration, and my work. It is inevitable to look to one of the great illustrators of 20th-century gay culture as a reference: an artist capable of creating a visual language that is so sexy, so masculine, so charged with eroticism, but also with humor, freedom, and a profound fascination with male beauty. That imagery connects naturally with the sensibility of Palomo, a house that has historically explored desire, identity, sensuality, and new ways of understanding masculinity.
To see such a powerful representation of queer art on the Met carpet, and for it to be worn by a member of our own community, fills me with pride and emotion. For me, this suit is not just a fashion piece: it is a tribute to a visual, emotional, and political genealogy that came before us and continues to pave the way.’’
Thank you @thereallukeevans, @purplepr, @chrisbrownstylist and @voguemagazine
Polaroid imagery by @chrisbrownstylist
#PalomoBoy #PalomoSpain #MetGala2026

Behind The Look
Luke Evan’s Met Gala ensemble draws from the bold, graphic sensuality of Tom of Finland, echoing his precise linework, celebration of subcultures, and unapologetic eroticism.
Our creative director @alejandrogomezpalomo explains:
‘’Tom of Finland and his universe have always been part of my imagination, my inspiration, and my work. It is inevitable to look to one of the great illustrators of 20th-century gay culture as a reference: an artist capable of creating a visual language that is so sexy, so masculine, so charged with eroticism, but also with humor, freedom, and a profound fascination with male beauty. That imagery connects naturally with the sensibility of Palomo, a house that has historically explored desire, identity, sensuality, and new ways of understanding masculinity.
To see such a powerful representation of queer art on the Met carpet, and for it to be worn by a member of our own community, fills me with pride and emotion. For me, this suit is not just a fashion piece: it is a tribute to a visual, emotional, and political genealogy that came before us and continues to pave the way.’’
Thank you @thereallukeevans, @purplepr, @chrisbrownstylist and @voguemagazine
Polaroid imagery by @chrisbrownstylist
#PalomoBoy #PalomoSpain #MetGala2026

Behind The Look
Luke Evan’s Met Gala ensemble draws from the bold, graphic sensuality of Tom of Finland, echoing his precise linework, celebration of subcultures, and unapologetic eroticism.
Our creative director @alejandrogomezpalomo explains:
‘’Tom of Finland and his universe have always been part of my imagination, my inspiration, and my work. It is inevitable to look to one of the great illustrators of 20th-century gay culture as a reference: an artist capable of creating a visual language that is so sexy, so masculine, so charged with eroticism, but also with humor, freedom, and a profound fascination with male beauty. That imagery connects naturally with the sensibility of Palomo, a house that has historically explored desire, identity, sensuality, and new ways of understanding masculinity.
To see such a powerful representation of queer art on the Met carpet, and for it to be worn by a member of our own community, fills me with pride and emotion. For me, this suit is not just a fashion piece: it is a tribute to a visual, emotional, and political genealogy that came before us and continues to pave the way.’’
Thank you @thereallukeevans, @purplepr, @chrisbrownstylist and @voguemagazine
Polaroid imagery by @chrisbrownstylist
#PalomoBoy #PalomoSpain #MetGala2026

Behind The Look
Luke Evan’s Met Gala ensemble draws from the bold, graphic sensuality of Tom of Finland, echoing his precise linework, celebration of subcultures, and unapologetic eroticism.
Our creative director @alejandrogomezpalomo explains:
‘’Tom of Finland and his universe have always been part of my imagination, my inspiration, and my work. It is inevitable to look to one of the great illustrators of 20th-century gay culture as a reference: an artist capable of creating a visual language that is so sexy, so masculine, so charged with eroticism, but also with humor, freedom, and a profound fascination with male beauty. That imagery connects naturally with the sensibility of Palomo, a house that has historically explored desire, identity, sensuality, and new ways of understanding masculinity.
To see such a powerful representation of queer art on the Met carpet, and for it to be worn by a member of our own community, fills me with pride and emotion. For me, this suit is not just a fashion piece: it is a tribute to a visual, emotional, and political genealogy that came before us and continues to pave the way.’’
Thank you @thereallukeevans, @purplepr, @chrisbrownstylist and @voguemagazine
Polaroid imagery by @chrisbrownstylist
#PalomoBoy #PalomoSpain #MetGala2026

Behind The Look
Luke Evan’s Met Gala ensemble draws from the bold, graphic sensuality of Tom of Finland, echoing his precise linework, celebration of subcultures, and unapologetic eroticism.
Our creative director @alejandrogomezpalomo explains:
‘’Tom of Finland and his universe have always been part of my imagination, my inspiration, and my work. It is inevitable to look to one of the great illustrators of 20th-century gay culture as a reference: an artist capable of creating a visual language that is so sexy, so masculine, so charged with eroticism, but also with humor, freedom, and a profound fascination with male beauty. That imagery connects naturally with the sensibility of Palomo, a house that has historically explored desire, identity, sensuality, and new ways of understanding masculinity.
To see such a powerful representation of queer art on the Met carpet, and for it to be worn by a member of our own community, fills me with pride and emotion. For me, this suit is not just a fashion piece: it is a tribute to a visual, emotional, and political genealogy that came before us and continues to pave the way.’’
Thank you @thereallukeevans, @purplepr, @chrisbrownstylist and @voguemagazine
Polaroid imagery by @chrisbrownstylist
#PalomoBoy #PalomoSpain #MetGala2026
Pleasure Park at TOM House wouldn’t be what it is without our incredible volunteers 🌿 if you feel like getting your hands a little dirty, check out Garden Day through the link in bio.

The “SEX NOW” exhibition in Düsseldorf wraps on 3rd May 2026.
Since September 2025, the exhibition has invited audiences into a bold, creative dialogue about sexuality and society. Today we're spotlighting "KINKY," a space where pleasure, control, and expression collide and are redefined.
Learn more in the EVENTS section at the link in bio.
Photo credits:
Pia Koop | @pia_k.photography

The “SEX NOW” exhibition in Düsseldorf wraps on 3rd May 2026.
Since September 2025, the exhibition has invited audiences into a bold, creative dialogue about sexuality and society. Today we're spotlighting "KINKY," a space where pleasure, control, and expression collide and are redefined.
Learn more in the EVENTS section at the link in bio.
Photo credits:
Pia Koop | @pia_k.photography

The “SEX NOW” exhibition in Düsseldorf wraps on 3rd May 2026.
Since September 2025, the exhibition has invited audiences into a bold, creative dialogue about sexuality and society. Today we're spotlighting "KINKY," a space where pleasure, control, and expression collide and are redefined.
Learn more in the EVENTS section at the link in bio.
Photo credits:
Pia Koop | @pia_k.photography

The “SEX NOW” exhibition in Düsseldorf wraps on 3rd May 2026.
Since September 2025, the exhibition has invited audiences into a bold, creative dialogue about sexuality and society. Today we're spotlighting "KINKY," a space where pleasure, control, and expression collide and are redefined.
Learn more in the EVENTS section at the link in bio.
Photo credits:
Pia Koop | @pia_k.photography
A lifetime of boots, ready for its next life.
The legendary collection of Steven Ng (1955–2025)—a beloved San Francisco leatherman who collected over 900 pairs across decades—is now in its final chapter.
One day only at TOM House. Visit the link in our bio for details.
Boots 20–50% off retail, with additional discounts based on wear.
About opening night...😉🎨
“It was happiness, the moment right then” by Artist-in-Residence Carlos Enfedaque (@enfedead) is on view now at TOM House.
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