What it is
Raw hemp. No dyes. No treatments to even out color or texture.
The tone is that of the plant. Earthy, irregular, with visible variations in each piece.
It doesn't seek homogeneity. It doesn't need to.
What you see is hemp fiber exactly as it comes from the crop, transformed just enough to become fabric.
Nothing more.
Why this way
Hemp doesn't need corrections.
In its raw state is where the material shows itself exactly as it is.
Every additional step means water and energy consumption. It is no coincidence that it leads our long-term sustainability analysis against other materials.
Working it raw is a choice. Not to simplify, but to avoid altering what already works.
Where it comes from
The fabric comes from Europe.
Producers in Lithuania who control the entire process, from crop to yarn. No middlemen.
The hemp is rain-fed. No pesticides or herbicides.
What doesn't become fiber is used as biomass. Processed with 100% renewable energy. OEKO-TEX® Standard 100 certified.
A clear origin. Real traceability.
What it translates to
The weave is open. It allows air to circulate and prevents moisture.
In contact with use, it changes. It adapts and gains flexibility without losing structure. The surface softens, but doesn't weaken.
At the end of its useful life, it decomposes leaving no traces the soil cannot recognize.
It is the consequence of working with the material in its original state.
Hemp in its raw state is ethics made material. The first of a range that respects its origin and nothing more.