From seed to stitch — linen procurement in Yunnan
Sandry Law, our Head of Procurement based in Kunming, spent the better part of spring 2025 in the villages around Dali, where a small cooperative has been growing flax and hand-weaving linen for three generations. The unbleached cloth they produce is rare — most commercial linen is chemically softened or blended, but this cloth is purely mechanical: retted in dew, scutched by hand, and woven on foot-looms. Sandry worked directly with the weavers to select a batch of the heaviest grade, balancing heft with drape, then arranged for stonewashing at a finishing atelier in Kunming to skip the break-in period.
The result is an apron that feels instantly familiar — no stiff new-shirt awkwardness. It arrives ready for the tea room floor, the pop-up market, or the daily pour. Each piece carries the slight irregularities of handmade cloth: a slub here, a selvedge whisper there. Over months of use, it records the story of its wearer — a splash of tea, a patch of sun-fading — and becomes a personal archive of service. Sandry calls it ‘a workhorse with quiet beauty’ — a phrase he borrows from the weavers themselves.