
Woven by hand on traditional looms, our collection honours heritage,
sustainability, and quiet luxury.
Made to be lived with, lived in, cherished, and collected.
For over 16 years, this work has been sustained through direct, long-term relationships with the last remaining male master artisans in Türkiye still weaving on traditional shuttle looms. These are not suppliers but custodians of knowledge, men whose hands carry techniques learned in childhood and refined over a lifetime. Our role has never been to extract from this work or push it beyond its natural limits, but to protect the conditions that allow it to continue.
Every piece begins with fibres chosen for structural integrity and long-term use. GOTS-certified organic Turkish cotton, alongside carefully sourced linen and silk, are selected for how they perform over time. Weight, density, and weave are determined with durability in mind.
The standard is not aesthetic. It is structural.
Each textile is woven on traditional shuttle looms in small workshops where knowledge is lived, not archived.
These techniques survive only through continued practice. The last of the male master weavers oversee each stage from warp to finishing, ensuring that skill remains present throughout.
What is woven is measured. Quantities remain limited. Designs are released only when resolved.
Pace follows material and method. Each run remains intentionally small, allowing attention to stay close to the work.
We work directly with these weavers and responsible thread suppliers. Fibres are traceable. Partnerships are long-term.
Environmental responsibility is embedded in material choice and scale. Longevity reduces waste. Decisions are made with consequence in mind.
Certain designs required their own space.They demanded greater precision and a depth of care that asked for separation. Jennifer chose to follow those instincts.
Each piece is carried to completion. Proportion, weight, tone, and texture are resolved before release. What remains is what meets her standard.
Organic cotton remains foundational here, as it always has. Linen and silk are given focused attention. These fibres are increasingly scarce and demand deliberate handling. Their nature calls for smaller runs and closer attention.
Establishing a separate collection required stepping beyond preservation and allowing design to lead more visibly. The standards did not change. The authorship is simply more present.