The Rebellion of the Wheel
Etymologically rooted in the Sanskrit khaddar (hand-spun), Khadi was never just a fabric; it was a socio-political revolt against the industrial uniformity of the Empire. We re-engineer this history by fusing it with the Serge de Nîmes (denim) tradition, creating a textile that bridges the Gandhian charkha and the American frontier. The process begins in the black cotton soils of India, where indigenous short-staple cotton is harvested by hand, preserving the fiber’s natural twist. It is then hand-spun into yarn that retains the human pulse thick, breathable, and purposefully irregular. Unlike rigid mill-made denim, our fabric is dyed in fermenting natural indigo vats and woven on pit looms, creating a "living denim" that softens and evolves, carrying the etymological weight of resistance in every thread.