Renslow was a photographer, and in 1952 met
Dom Orejudos on Chicago's
Oak Street Beach, asking him to model for him. in the 1970s, they lived together in the
Francis J Dewes mansion. Renslow and Orejudos founded Kris Studios, a
physique photography studio that took photos for gay magazines they published. The studio was named in part to honor transgender pioneer
Christine Jorgensen. In 1958, they bought a gym which they renamed Triumph Gymnasium and Health Studio. That same year Renslow and Orejudos bought Gold Coast Show Lounge, and transformed it into the country's first gay leather bar, called the
Gold Coast bar, with a uniform/western/
leather dress code, a
backroom, and homoerotic art (by Orejudos) on the walls. founded the
Man's Country/Chicago bathhouse in 1973 (pictured here in 2016).
Man’s Country/Chicago, founded by Renslow and Orejudos, opened at 5015–5017 North
Clark Street in Chicago on September 19, 1973, and held the title of Chicago's longest-running gay bathhouse when it closed in 2017. It was the third bathhouse co-founded by Renslow, whose previous two clubs were forced to shut down due to
homophobia-fueled pressure from the
police. Before opening Man's Country/Chicago, Renslow co-owned locations of the
Club Baths chain in Chicago, Kansas City, and Phoenix with Chuck Fleck. Renslow founded Chicago's August
White Party on August 8, 1974, when he hosted a party to celebrate his birthday and thank his patrons. It was then held for the next 36 years until 2010. The largest party was held in 1979 at
Navy Pier, with 5,000 participants. The forerunner of the
International Mr. Leather competition was the 1970s "Mr. Gold Coast" contest held at Chicago's
Gold Coast leather bar, owned by Renslow and
Dom Orejudos. The "Mr. Gold Coast" contest became one of the bar's most popular promotions causing the need to locate the competition to a larger venue in 1979, upon which the title was changed to International Mr. Leather. founded the
Leather Archives & Museum in 1991 (its entrance is pictured here in a 2023 photo). In 1991 Renslow and
Tony DeBlase founded the
Leather Archives & Museum "as a community archives, library, and museum of
leather,
kink,
fetish, and
BDSM history and culture." Renslow and DeBlase founded the museum in response to the
AIDS crisis, during which the leather and fetish communities' history and belongings were frequently lost or intentionally suppressed and discarded. == Honors and legacy ==