ZEITWORKS
Billfold Wallet - 2004 Audi A6 S Line
Billfold Wallet - 2004 Audi A6 S Line
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From a 2004 A6 S Line — the alternative-cool German saloon, the car The Devil Wears Prada put in a key scene as the marker of New York creative-director status.
This is a unique Billfold wallet made from the original interior of a 2004 Audi A6 S Line.
* Full-length bill compartments
* 4 credit card pockets with space for up to 20 cards
* Size: 11 cm x 8.5 (4 ½ inch x 3 ¼)
Each ZEITWORKS wallet is a unique creation, carrying the history and character of the car of the vehicle it once belonged to, making every design impossible to replicate.
Handmade in Canada - Enjoy the Ride!
A Note on Brand Transparency: ZEITWORKS is an independent design company passionate about automotive history. We source and upcycle authentic vintage materials, but we are not affiliated with, authorized, maintained, sponsored, or endorsed by Dr. Ing. h.c. F. Porsche AG, Mercedes-Benz Group AG, Bayerische Motoren Werke AG (BMW), General Motors LLC (including Cadillac), or any other original automotive manufacturers. Our products are independent creations made to celebrate the legacy of these iconic designs.

The Car Behind This Bag
2004 · 3.0L V6 quattro · Neckarsulm · C5 chassis · the sport-trim mid-size Audi
The S Line was Audi's in-house sport-appearance package — added springs, deeper bumpers, sport seats, and the brushed-aluminium interior trim that distinguished the trim level from the standard A6. By 2004 it had become the default specification for North American buyers who wanted the A6 to look the way an A6 was supposed to look. The C5 platform underneath was approaching the end of its production run; the C6 would replace it in 2005. The 3.0-litre V6 with quattro produced 220 horsepower.
The A6 of this period was the car the late-1990s Wall Street junior associate was driving by 2004 — graduated up from the BMW 3 Series, not yet ready for a 5 Series, and unwilling to commit to a Mercedes E-Class. The S Line specifically became the alternative-cool German saloon. The Devil Wears Prada (2006) put one in a key scene as the visual marker of a particular kind of New York creative-director status. Audi's quattro system had reached the moment of cultural respectability after twenty years of patient marketing.
Audi built 750,000 C5 A6s across the model's run from 1997 to 2004. The Neckarsulm-fitted leather, brushed-aluminium, and dark-wood interiors of the S Line specifically remain the cabin reference point of Audi at the precise moment the brand transitioned from premium-but-second-tier to fully equal among the German big three.