I am working on the ID of an Inocybe with cracking and small (2-3 cm across) pileus with chestnut color and variable striated with beige bands or patches (maybe because of hard soil over) growing at edges or under of a pine afforested area.
My options are short listed on fuscidula / nitidiuscula / leiocephala. The spores are broadly ellipsoid navicular (front view), almond-shaped (dorsal view), 10.6-13.2 um x 5.2-7.6 um (mean12.1 x 6.6) with a Q of 1.8 +/- 0.3. The cheilocystidia have a thick wall (not extremely thick) with apical crystals, in clusters 60-70 x 13.5-18um, while the pleurocystidia are more or less similar but not frequent and usually solitary.
Pileipellis:
Intricate cylindrical hyphae of various widths, but apparently two types, one that are cylindrical and slender, hyaline, 5 um wide, irregular and intricate, and the other type formed by larger and broader (11-14 um wide), sausage-shaped hyphae with pigmented incrustations on the walls.
The stipe seems to redden a bit in old specimens otherwise ocher-cream when fresh and undisturbed. The pruinosity seems to run half the stipe length (differs between various specimens) in some it seems going down in a patchy distribution below the lower half of the stipe.
I have a whole set of characters that I can show and discuss, but I think the above is the crucial. Photos attached.