When you buy from us, you're getting something no machine can make. Every pattern on every piece of fabric was stamped by a person — one block at a time. These are the real people and the real process behind every piece you own.
The block is carved by hand
A craftsperson chisels your pattern into a block of teak or sheesham wood. This alone can take several hours for a detailed design. A skilled block carver trains for years, and the same block may print thousands of metres of cloth over its lifetime.
The fabric is stretched flat
The fabric is washed first to remove any coating that would stop the dye absorbing. Then it's stretched tightly over a long padded table — you can see hundreds of carved blocks stored on the shelves behind, ready to be used. Any wrinkle at this stage shows up in the final print, so this step takes real patience.
The dye is prepared and loaded
The block is pressed into a tray of dye to pick up exactly the right amount of colour — you can see the beautiful printed fabric taking shape right alongside. Too much dye and the fine details bleed. Too little and the print looks patchy. Getting this balance right is the kind of skill that only comes with years of practice.
The pattern is pressed onto the cloth
The block is placed on the cloth, pressed down firmly, held for a few seconds, then lifted cleanly and straight up. No sliding, no rocking. This single motion — repeated hundreds of times across a length of fabric — is what makes every piece unique. No two prints land in exactly the same way.
"Every slight misalignment, every ghost impression — these are not flaws. They are the signature of the hand that made it."
Colours are built up layer by layer
Each colour needs its own block. After the first colour dries, the second block is aligned and pressed. Then the third. Traditional designs often use three or four colours — each one placed by eye, by hand, by feel. The range of dyes you can see here is what gives our pieces their richness and depth.
The fabric is hung out to dry
The printed fabric is hung outside in the open air to dry — sometimes stretching for metres in the sun. After 24 hours it's ironed firmly to heat-set the dye, locking the colour in permanently. After a final gentle wash, the cloth is finished and ready to become something you'll keep for years.
This is why our pieces feel different to mass-produced fabric. The slight variation in pattern, the richness of the dye, the texture under your fingers — all of that comes from the process you just read about. Real hands. Real craft. Made one block at a time.
All photos taken in our own workshop.