Word from our founder
Looking back at where I was just 10 years ago, my journey could have taken any other direction than this. I could have ended up so many other places than here.
My background in aesthetics and digital design might not seem as the obvious starting point for a fabric designer and founder of a sustainable fabric brand, but sometimes the unobvious and unknown turns takes us further than we would have ever imagined.
My dedication to sewing runs in the blood from my mother. I grew up in a home with a sewing machine always running. Back then, in the mid 80-ies, sewing as a technique, as a hobby and a way of making your own clothes, wasn’t really much different from today.
The big difference from then until now, is how we have become more aware of the materials we use, and how we can use sewing, both as a hobby but also as part of commercial production, as a statement towards a more conscious and responsible fashion industry, whether you are at home making your own clothes, or shopping RTW clothes. For both purposes you have the choice and the power to make a very important statement when choosing which materials you want to work with.
I’m not really sure when exactly my fascination of fabric started. But at some point I realized that fabric wasn’t just fabric, and I started digging in to every detail of every piece, and I found myself never not thinking about fabric. It was very clear that this was where I wanted to go. This was the right turn at the right time. So, I opened a fabric shop, and I became obsessed with fabric.
Being conscious of the world’s environmental and social challenges wasn’t new to me. A new perspective, however, occurred, when I started to combine it with fabric and went on this fascinating journey - it added another level to my fabric obsession that had to do with taking a stand and being critical of my own impact.
Gandhi once said that “there is no beauty in the finest cloth if it makes hunger and unhappiness”.
Over the years I have said no, and turned my back on so much beautiful fabric, because it didn’t come with a happy story.
I need the fabrics around me to tell stories of happiness. Stories about the environmental impact of the whole production cycle, stories of the people who made it, stories of how it got here, stories of its potential, and stories of how it’s lifecycle will hopefully conclude.
I know that they can’t all be happy stories in every chapter, but I want to make sure that I know their potential well enough to rewrite them.
After stating my devotion to working responsibly with fabric, there was no actual plan pertaining to what I wanted to make of this - or where I wanted to take the next turn.
Taking one step of a time led me to go different places, to meet different people and to finally end up at the right place with the right people around me. People who shared the same beliefs, people who shared the same power and will to make things happen - and people who want to make a change.
The rest is history.
I am beyond thankful to everyone who believes in me and continues to give me the trust and committance to always go one step further. Family, team members and business partners who all share the belief that this is not just the right way to go; it’s the only way to go.
You can always reach higher to go further, so that’s what I will continue to do.