A look at where your clothes are actually made.
The atelier is a working space — cutting tables, sewing machines, rolls of linen stacked against the walls. Natural light comes in from wide windows. The machines hum. Fabric is measured, pinned, and cut with purpose. There's nothing glamorous about it — just focused, skilled work.
What does a clothing atelier look like?
Not a factory. Not a studio with perfect lighting for Instagram. It's a workshop. Patterns hang on the walls. Thread spools are organised by colour. The cutting table is the centre of everything — that's where each garment begins.
How is a linen garment made from start to finish?
The fabric is measured and cut to the pattern. Pieces are pinned, then sewn — seams first, then hems, then finishing details. Every garment is checked for consistency before it's pressed and folded. The process takes time, and that's the point.
Why does handmade take longer?
Because each garment is made one at a time. There's no conveyor belt. No pre-cut stacks of identical pieces. When you order a custom size, the pattern is adjusted before cutting begins. That attention is what you're paying for.