Named after the Hindu goddess of destruction and creation, Kali is often depicted as fearsome, dark and untamed. She is not, however, a figure of fear but of transformation. Behind that image lies one of the most profound and beautiful symbols in spiritual tradition. She does not destroy out of malice. She destroys what no longer serves to protect, clearing the way for something new to emerge. She is the goddess of liberation.
Cut oversized in short-pile faux fur and falling almost to the floor, the Kali Coat is ceremonial and glamorous in equal measure. A hood frames the face. Epaulettes at the shoulders and running down the length of the sleeves are a deliberate reference to Kali's four arms.
The hem and sleeve cuffs are finished entirely with safety pins along the full circumference of each edge, adding weight that translates into movement. The coat swings with every step, alive and unhurried.
Protective armour. Divine glamour. Both, at once.
Calmuc is a dense, heavy and flame resistant 100% cotton fabric , originally hung in theatres to absorb sound and keep the outside world at a distance. It quite literally filters out noise. Worn as a blazer, that is exactly what it feels like. A stillness settles in. A sense of being grounded, present, and unshaken by what surrounds you.
The seams are raw and left to fray. Open edges, visible construction, imperfections worn on the surface rather than tucked away. Because true strength does not come from hiding what is difficult, but from carrying it as part of the whole.
And then there is the weight of it. The oversized cut and wide lapels broaden the shoulders and extend the silhouette. A reinforced back seam with a thin strip of elastic draws the fabric into a subtle sculptural curve, giving the back a quiet, structural tension. Putting it on feels like putting on armor.
The Vision Bomber does not shrink. Cut in an extreme, sculptural O-silhouette, it extends far beyond the body in every direction, creating a shape that is as much architecture as outerwear. This is not a jacket for blending in. It is a jacket for taking up exactly as much space as your vision requires.
The leather is worn with its grained side facing inward and the smoother reverse facing out. A deliberate inversion that questions which side of anything is meant to be seen and why.
A styling piece for extraordinary occasions. Available for styling on request [Get in touch]
The Painter Parker is the personification of an artist at work, carrying creative energy into every room it enters.
Everything about its construction supports the work. Every seam is sealed with waterproof tape and the fabric treated with an additional water-resistant coating. Two large front pockets hold brushes, tools and whatever else the day demands. A cape-like panel at the back, fitted with metal chains, allows canvases to be secured and carried with both hands free.
Think of it as an armored lab coat, but for artists. The structure and seriousness of a uniform, the utility of a site jacket, the protective logic of workwear, yet without any of the underlying authoritarian work ethic.
Built for creative work rather than compliance. Just the quiet confidence of someone who intuitively knows what they are doing.
A slim, cropped leather jacket . It wraps close to the body, fitting tight enough to feel the constraint. But where the physical is held in, everything else is left open. An open lining at the sleeves, no zipper, no buttons, nothing that seals. The jacket holds the body while the energy moves freely through it.
At the collar, structured ribbed fabric is shaped into a wave that folds around the neck like a petal. Soft where the leather is not. The lining surfaces at the sleeves and hem, raw-edged and fraying outward, as if what is usually kept inside has found its way out.
Finished with small metal brackets all over the jacket and a custom metal logo patch on the right side.
A cropped vest with a hood, a built-in scarf, and a construction that follows none of the usual rules. The hood runs seamlessly over the shoulders into the front panel where it continues around the back and extends into a generous scarf that wraps around the neck and anchors the piece in place. No shoulder seam. One continuous cut.
Worn layered under a jacket or coat, it functions as a second lining, adding warmth in cold conditions while the scarf and hood create a natural fur trim at the collar without any modification to the outer layer. It upgrades coats and even summer jackets for winter wear instantly.
The back panel can also be left to hang loose, letting the piece breathe and the silhouette open up, wich makes it wearable even in summer.
A vest, a scarf, a lining, a fur trim. All at once, a versatile vest, like a Swiss Army knife, designed for any circumstances.
No results match your search. Try removing a few filters.