The fibre

The fibre

We make a small range of natural-fibre basics — and we are precise about what that means. No vague “eco” language, no claims we can’t back with a certificate.

Folded natural linen with dried flowers
Natural linen, folded — woven from flax, not plastic.

Most clothing today is some blend of polyester, nylon or elastane — plastic, in other words. It is cheap to produce and it traps heat and odour against the skin. We took a different starting point: natural plant fibres, woven to last, tested for what they don’t contain.

Cotton

Soft, breathable and forgiving. Our cotton pieces are made from 100% cotton — no synthetic blend — so they breathe in warm weather and soften with every wash. Where a piece uses certified organic cotton, we say so and name the certificate.

Field of cotton plants ready for harvest
Cotton in the field — the plant our basics begin with.

Linen

Spun from the flax plant, linen is one of the most breathable fabrics there is. It keeps you cool in heat, gets softer over years of use, and is naturally one of the lowest-impact fibres to grow.

Flax fibres used to make linen
Flax fibres — spun and woven into linen cloth.

What we test for

Our fabrics are OEKO-TEX Standard 100 tested, which screens the finished textile for a long list of harmful substances. Where we use organic cotton, it is GOTS-certified. We name the certificate rather than using words like “non-toxic” or “chemical-free,” which don’t mean anything specific.

Close-up of natural linen fabric weave
The finished cloth — the textile that carries the certificate.

The short version: natural fibres, woven to last, and tested so you know what’s not in them. When we make a claim, we name the certificate behind it.

OEKO-TEX® Standard 100 and GOTS are independent textile certifications. We reference them only for products that carry them. Imagery is illustrative.