What Is Fibre Terroir?
Why we know where our wine comes from, but not our cloth.
A wine drinker can tell you that Burgundy’s limestone gives Pinot Noir its structure, that a Napa microclimate shapes a Cabernet. A coffee drinker debates an Ethiopian Yirgacheffe against a Colombian bean, knowing the hillside changes the cup. A cheesemonger will tell you which alpine pasture the cows grazed, and why a summer Comté tastes nothing like a winter one.
Textiles never got that language. We are sold “100% cotton” and “pure wool” as if the fibre had no origin worth naming — as if all cotton were the same cotton. It is not.
Fibre terroir is the idea that geography, climate, and tradition shape the character of a textile the way they shape a wine or a coffee. Where a fibre comes from changes what it is, and what it can become.
How Geography Shapes Fibre
This is not poetry. It is material behaviour.
Altitude changes wool. The thin air and brutal winters of a high plateau push an animal to grow a finer, more insulating fleece — warmth without weight. Bring the same breed down to warm grassland and the fibre coarsens within a generation.
Climate changes plant fibre. Temperature swings, rainfall, and the length of a growing season all act on staple length, strength, and crimp. The same cotton variety grown two hundred kilometres apart will not behave the same on a loom.
And tradition changes everything downstream. A region with centuries of spinning and weaving holds knowledge that no machine has — the ability to read a fibre by hand, to coax a short or difficult staple into thread that holds. That accumulated skill is as much a feature of a place as its soil.
Geography you can feel in the finished cloth.
We begin with a place worth paying attention to — for its biodiversity, its climate, its living craft.
We find the fibre that place produces, with the character its geography gives it.
We make the thing that fibre is genuinely best suited to become.
We Work Backwards From Most Brands
Most textile brands decide on a product, find the cheapest fibre that fits, and source it from wherever is convenient.
We work the other way. The land leads. The fibre follows. The product is the last decision, not the first.
That order is why our throws come from Gujarat’s pastoral wool and our stoles from Ladakh’s fine fleece, rather than the reverse. We make what each place is best at — not what we decided to sell and then went looking for.
Fibre Terroir vs. Generic Sourcing
“Sustainable,” “ethical,” “natural” — these words describe how a thing was made, and they have been used until they mean very little.
Fibre terroir describes where a thing comes from, and why that place produces something worth keeping. A fibre tied to a specific geography carries an argument for protecting that geography: its ecosystems, its breeds, its knowledge. Generic “natural cotton” carries none.
We are not asking you to buy something because it is good for the world in the abstract. We are asking you to notice that a cloth, like a wine, can have an origin — and that the origin is the interesting part.
Our Fibre Terroirs
Each of our textiles belongs to a single terroir. Each terroir is documented: its geography, its fibre, the hands that make it.
Deccan
Recycled cotton, handspun and handwoven in Bengaluru. A region whose centuries-old weaving tradition makes it possible to respin short, difficult fibre into cloth that lasts.
Dune
Patanwadi sheep wool from the semi-arid plains, handspun and handwoven. Wool with structure and resilience, bred by the heat and cold of the land.
Kala Cotton
Indigenous rainfed cotton from the Kutch district, grown without irrigation. A hardy short-staple fibre native to the land, not bred for the mill.
Highland
Fine wool hand-combed by Changpa herders on the Ladakh plateau, woven in Kashmir with a touch of silk. Extreme altitude produces fibre that insulates without bulk.