Traceability & Provenance
Sustainability Is
Not a Label.
It's a practice.
Traceability & Provenance
It's a practice.
Our view on sustainability is producing garments with the least amount of environmental, social, or animal impact — and the most amount of longevity, reusability, & recyclability. We believe in achieving that through fundamental transparency — about the fabrics we use, why we use or don't use them, about where we source from, & about how we produce.
of fashion's environmental footprint comes from the choice of materials alone
Because of this, we spent two years finding ways to establish a responsible supply chain — one that is sustainable, and responsible. Every decision has been guided by a value system of our dual pillars: the impact, and the craft.
Provenance Journey
Each of our garments comes with a QR code that transparently shares the known history and journey of that piece. From farm, to fiber, to yarn, to fabric, to finishing & dyeing, and eventually — garment making
The journey begins at the source, where raw materials are grown, raised, or harvested. From regenerative wool farms in Uruguay to organic cotton fields in Texas.
These materials are transformed into fibers through cleaning and processing.
That fiber is then spun into yarn and formed into fabric through weaving or knitting.
The fabric is finished and dyed to achieve its final character, with azo-free dyes chosen for safety and lower impact.
Handcrafted by multi-generational artisan families, the fabric is cut, assembled, and crafted into the finished piece.
Our Materials
We work with nature, not against it. Every material we choose meets rigorous standards for quality, environmental responsibility, and animal welfare—because what we make matters, and how it’s made matters even more.
Grown without synthetic pesticides or fertilizers, supporting soil health and reducing chemical runoff.
Sourced from farms that uphold high standards of animal welfare and land stewardship, with a focus on regenerative farming practices.
An ethical alternative to conventional silk, allowing the silkworm to complete its life cycle naturally before harvest.
A soft, plant-based fiber made from responsibly sourced wood pulp through a closed-loop process.
Extracted from the stems of banana plants—agricultural byproducts usually discarded or burned—reducing crop-burning pollution and providing additional income for farmers.
A regenerated cellulose fabric made from cotton linters—the fine fibers surrounding the cotton seed, typically treated as a byproduct. Breathable, anti-static, and silk-like, it offers a refined interior with a lower-impact profile.
One of our defining materials—dual certified in Responsible Wool Standard (RWS) & NATIVA™ Protocol; sourced from farms in Uruguay that uphold high standards of animal welfare, land stewardship, and full blockchain-backed traceability from farm to finished garment.
— Tamanna Mullen, Founder
Our Standards
There are materials whose environmental, ethical, or recyclability costs we believe are simply too high. Here's what we've excluded from our supply chain — and why.
There is nothing ethical about clothing made from animals' skin. The production of leather and fur contributes to climate change, land devastation, pollution, and water contamination.
Made from non-renewable petroleum resources through energy-intensive production processes. These synthetic fabrics are non-biodegradable and shed microplastics with every wash, contributing to environmental pollution and human exposure.
While common in the industry, poly-cotton blends are extremely challenging to recycle on a large scale. The inseparable fusion of natural and synthetic fibers creates end-of-life complications that undermine circularity.